I so appreciate you all for taking the time to help me understand this stuff. One of the reasons I ask this is because I want to have a simple kit and not carry around loads of lenses. I now have a Sony A6k with an 18135 lens, and for most things this is fine. However, now and again I find I need a little more reach, so was exploring how much I can consider cropping without too much loss of IQ.
That's more complicated than your original question. Not all megapixels are created equal. Put a Zeiss Otus lens on a 24MP full frame body, a kit zoom on a 24MP APS-C body and grab a 24MP (or as close as you can find) pint & shoot.
Which of those is going to produce the biggest sharp prints ?
DXOMark attempts to resolve some of this with their "perceptual megapixels" rating, but common consensus is that the methodology is too secret and the results too inconsistent to take seriously. The basic idea is that, for any given lens & camera combination, you take a photo at a particular focal length and f-stop, then you see how far you can downsize it before you start to lose actual detail (i.e. if you start with a really fuzzy image, you can probably downsize it from 24MP to 3MP, then resize it back up again, and make a print with just as much detail).
What all of this means is that whether you start with 16MP or 24MP or something else isn't what's important - more important is just how sharp that 18-135mm lens is at the long end. You can crop it to 6MP and you can find websites that will tell you that 6MP is good enough for a print of a certain size, but if you're cropping from a zoom at its longest focal length, it may not be a detailed 6MP.
The other potential issue with cropping is the increase in noise. If you take a 24MP image and crop it to 6MP, at 100%, the noise is identical, but if you print both to the same size (or display both online at the same size), the crop looks noisier. At low ISOs, this isn't an issue - just something to consider if you get into situations where you want to crop by a lot *and* you're shooting at high ISO. (Basically, whatever print size you're looking to make from your cropped image, picture the image quality being equal to what you'd get making a print twice as big from the uncropped image).
So you really want to know how good a cropped image from the 18-135mm is ... and you need to know how good an image you actually need for what you do.
Since you have the camera and the lens, you're in the best position to see for yourself.
- Dennis
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