Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
--Hopefully it's helpful.
http://inlinethumb03.webshots.com/42242/2654907460076970275S600x600Q85.jpg
ccs_hello
from dpreview sensor sizesalways say this), the 18x13.5 dates back to pre-DSLR era (the same
- 4/3rd is 17.3x13mm (check the specs sheet on any Oly site they
way as APS used to be 24x16 in film era).
as u see here olympus themselves compare 18x13.5 to 24x16, and in their specs sheet they CONSISTENTLY give 17.3 x13from dpreview sensor sizesalways say this), the 18x13.5 dates back to pre-DSLR era (the same
- 4/3rd is 17.3x13mm (check the specs sheet on any Oly site they
way as APS used to be 24x16 in film era).
http://www.dpreview.com/learn/?/Glossary/Camera_System/sensor_sizes_01.htm
4/3" 18.000 13.500
and
![]()
this is laughable and i am sure u yourself don't believe in it, when the 4/3 standard was defined in 2003, panasonic's idea of cameras that shoots multiple aspect ratios was not yet there or at least not envisaged for 4/3rd dslrs.Olympus quote image area size on specification sheets not the sensor
size. We think now that this is b/se the sensor is normalised to
accept the different frame ratios of mFT, which allows 3x2, 4x3 and
9x16 framing. That would explain why E3 sensor which uses 10.1Mp, has
11.8Mp on the chip.
Canon use the term "image area" in their specs sheet and give after that the well-known sizeThe nominal size of the chip then (which is what everyone else uses)
is 18x13.5mm
--Yes, I've moved on to a DSLR...But a hot prosumer for under $800
would be my forst choice for travel photography.
Still waiting for a 2/3" prosumer... that would update the caliber
camera that the Konica Minolta A2 was.Too bad a 2/3 sized sensor
couldn't be left at 8mp and modernized for noise and autofucus speed.
the diagram above comes from Olympusas u see here olympus themselves compare 18x13.5 to 24x16, and infrom dpreview sensor sizesalways say this), the 18x13.5 dates back to pre-DSLR era (the same
- 4/3rd is 17.3x13mm (check the specs sheet on any Oly site they
way as APS used to be 24x16 in film era).
http://www.dpreview.com/learn/?/Glossary/Camera_System/sensor_sizes_01.htm
4/3" 18.000 13.500
and
![]()
their specs sheet they CONSISTENTLY give 17.3 x13
they dont have an Mp count a full 16% more than the sensorthis is laughable and i am sure u yourself don't believe in it, whenOlympus quote image area size on specification sheets not the sensor
size. We think now that this is b/se the sensor is normalised to
accept the different frame ratios of mFT, which allows 3x2, 4x3 and
9x16 framing. That would explain why E3 sensor which uses 10.1Mp, has
11.8Mp on the chip.
the 4/3 standard was defined in 2003, panasonic's idea of cameras
that shoots multiple aspect ratios was not yet there or at least not
envisaged for 4/3rd dslrs.
as for the 11.8MP, that's the total MP count! ALL cameras have total
MP count besides the well-known effective MP count because u need
"invisible" peripheral pixels outside the image in order to make
--accurate calculations and PP for the visible peripheral pixels on the
edge of the image (Bayer array interpolation would be off at the edge
pixels otherwise).
The nominal size of the chip then (which is what everyone else uses)
is 18x13.5mm
--
this is where art departs realityarea 525.47mm²). you have 28.7 instead of 28.1 in the table with the
- the APS-H as in the 1D mk III is 28.1x18.7mm (diagonal 33.75mm,
diagonal and area calculated based on that error.
manufacturers use 22.2x14.8 or 23.6x15.8 in their specs sheets and
- olympus use 17.3x13mm in their specs sheets just as other
they (oly) mention 18x13.5 only in the context of talking generally
about the 4/3 standard and giving a rough idea about its size
compared to other formats. they compare 18x13.5 to the approximate
but now obsolete size of 24x16mm of APS-C, so as i said before i
think that 18x13.5 is meaningless in the context of this table which
lists the imaging area of each sensor. 17.5x13.2 or so is a size
mentioned in Oly E-1 literature (not the specs sheet) and it refers
yet it states 'sensor size', it is a nominal value just the sameto an area intermediate between the total pixels area and imaging
pixels area, these are not the dimensions that should fairly be
compared to Canon's 22.x14.8 for example (which is the
imaging/effective area of the sensor).
Still here:the E300 sensor is KAF8300, and its document is kaf-8300longspec.pdf,
if you want it i can have it sent to you. You may still find it onthe net.
Data sheet:It is also 19.7x15.04mm; yet the nominal size is still18x13.5mm.
HTHFurther to this, the fov between E1 and later models like
E3 is identical. Conclude the imager size is the same
theres nothing confusing in itnote that the Olympus E-1's sensor has 3 confusingly named areas:
he means nominal, like for every other sensor1) Total pixels area 18x13.5mm (that's normal just as all cameras
have total pixel counts and total pixel area). pixels on the edges
dark register lay outside, the total imager size carries those samplesof this area help in processing the image but dont appear in the
final image
--2) Active pixels area 17.4x13.1 or 17.5x13.2mm (and here lies the
confusion, people confuse "active" with "effective" which in this
case are not the same, other cameras normally do not have a
comparable spec to this area). pixels on the edges of this area are
of more importance than those of the previous total area put still
don't make it to the final image. they are called dark pixels or
something like that.
3) Imaging pixels area 17.3x13mm (this is comparable to what you find
in other camera's specs sheets). the final image that you get from
the camera whether it be E1 or any other 4/3rd camera was/is captured
on this 17.3x13 area, thats what you'll always find in the specs
sheets:
http://www.olympus.co.jp/en/support/imsg/digicamera/download/manual/esystem/man_e1_en.pdf (check page 42 of the PDF: "Screen size: 17.3 mm (H) x 13.0 mm (V) (0.9" x 0.5")").
http://www.olympusamerica.com/e3/specifications.asp
"Image sensor size 17.3 mm (H) x 13.0 mm (V)"
http://www.olympusamerica.com/cpg_section/product.asp?product=1386&fl=4
"Sensor Size 17.3 mm (H) x 13.0 mm (V)"
--
Xavo
image is the only validation and most of their life isn't real.
modified from Sam Sparro - Black and Gold.
this is it here from kaf-8300longspec.pdfStill here:the E300 sensor is KAF8300, and its document is kaf-8300longspec.pdf,
if you want it i can have it sent to you. You may still find it onthe net.
http://www.kodak.com/ezpres/business/ccd/global/plugins/acrobat/en/datasheet/fullframe/KAF-8300LongSpec.pdf
Data sheet:It is also 19.7x15.04mm; yet the nominal size is still18x13.5mm.
17.96 x 13.52 mm active area; 22.5 mm diagonal
yup, you gotta draw the line somewhere, but as you can see, a lot of pixels lay outside of the 18x13.5mm nominal size, thats the same for all sensorsActive pixels: 3326 x 2504 @ 5.4 micron
'Total' and 'effective' pixel counts are higher, and occupy a larger
area, but 18x13.5 is the imaging area, as far as I can tell.
--HTHFurther to this, the fov between E1 and later models like
E3 is identical. Conclude the imager size is the same
--
Alan Robinson