El Profe
Senior Member
CMOS sensors are just cheaper to manufacture than CCD. That was the reason originally was used in P&S cameras. Canon was the first company to start using CMOS sensors in their SLR cameras.
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No: My FA*300/2.8 and many other very expensive lenses won't work on a 645D (I know people with the 600/4 and the 250-600/5.6, too). I'm seriously considering looking into getting one or two of these lenses adapted to fit my Sony A850, even though it would mean manual focus and manual exposure.And then there is the 645D, shouldnt people who want FF go to this camera ?
One of the BIG advantages of FF for Nikon and Canon shooters is access to real primes..OK how about a modern Nikon 3DX FX with a 1990s film lens. SLRgear also has examples if you want to look. But I have seen enough through my research to know overall film lens on FF digital sensors will never perform as well as on a APS sensor. Moreover the lens may even have aberrations such that it makes little sense to buy it versus a more modern lens (on FF).
http://www.photozone.de/nikon_ff/617-nikkorafd2028ff
I don't think that's a good example of a lens that proves your point, though.
The 20 f/2.8D is sought after by FF shooters because it's very sharp in the center wide-open and very, very small. In fact the 'flaws' of this lens (some vignetting on FF, some distortion, some CA) are more attributable to it's size more than anything else. When you make a very small 20mm f/2.8 lens, some sacrifices get made.
I love the 20mm f/2.8D on FF and it goes with me a lot of places.
His point seems to be that because film emulsion has a real thickness it tolerates minute amounts of difference in focus of different colours, whereas digital has zero thinkness so the colours can focus differently and show fringing.Watch this video of the 645D and note at 4:55 what the Pentax rep says about Digital compared to film. Digital is very demanding of lens.
.One of the BIG advantages of FF for Nikon and Canon shooters is access to real primes..OK how about a modern Nikon 3DX FX with a 1990s film lens. SLRgear also has examples if you want to look. But I have seen enough through my research to know overall film lens on FF digital sensors will never perform as well as on a APS sensor. Moreover the lens may even have aberrations such that it makes little sense to buy it versus a more modern lens (on FF).
http://www.photozone.de/nikon_ff/617-nikkorafd2028ff
I don't think that's a good example of a lens that proves your point, though.
The 20 f/2.8D is sought after by FF shooters because it's very sharp in the center wide-open and very, very small. In fact the 'flaws' of this lens (some vignetting on FF, some distortion, some CA) are more attributable to it's size more than anything else. When you make a very small 20mm f/2.8 lens, some sacrifices get made.
I love the 20mm f/2.8D on FF and it goes with me a lot of places.
One of the BIG advantages to the Pentax APS-C system is access to real primes.
Pentax really throws a wet blanket over the desire for a FF camera.
This problem you speak of exists in all image sensors. Please explain why you are singling out FF? Also, how is an APS-C specific lens, which only covers APS, any different from a 35mm lens that covers the FF format? And why would this edge issue be more problematic with a bigger sensor? An edge is an edge. Finally, how do you explain the fact that many FF lenses have superb image quality corner to corner, some of these having been designed before digital?This negates your whole post and confirms as my post says there is a problem of gathering light at the edges of a sensor. Of course the bigger the sensor the worse the problem becomes. Why do you think Canon makes smaller than 35mm formats? I don't know but it could very well be for the reason given.From saying Pentax invented the SLR (they didn't) to your main point that 35mm is somehow inferior to APS, you are spreading a lot of misinformation. I don't know if it's because you're not able to interpret data very well (your quotes from photozone, for example) or you just found a lot of bogus, out of date internet sources, but this just isn't true.
If you can name a 35mm lens currently in production that lags behind an APS-C lens (particularly at equivalent apertures), show me. BTW, why did you spend time on vignetting, which not only is easily correctable, but is often desirable at the apertures where it is visible (Nikon 35AFS, for example)?
I hope I didn't mean any offence, but you should check your sources before spreading these "facts".
Why don't you compare like to like then?With you I won't go further until you show you can see the correlations of the articles I posted. If you don't see a correlation it tells me you don't know enough and its only in your IMO.
Well of course they receive less light, all lenses vignette. The steeper the angle of light, the more difficult it is for the sensor to capture, but this is true for all sensors.If anyone reads the Luminance Landscape and DXO articles and don't see a correlation with pixels wells at the edges for a sensor receiving less light. You need to read more?
They haven't though. A high quality Canon APS lens like the 17-55IS only has slightly less vignetting (1.5EV at 17mm/2.8) than a high quality 35mm equivalent such as the 24-70L(1.95EV at 24/2.8), even though the 24-70 is a much more extreme lens (effectively 1 1/3 stop faster and somewhat wider). In fact, at f/4 which is approximately equivalent to f/2.8 on APS, the 24-70/5D combo has less vignetting than the APS-C. Same goes for any lens I've ever seen, with the exception of course of a 35mm lens used on APS. Obviously there is way less vignetting in this case, as the sensor is only using 40% of the lens.If someone thinks having over two stops of vignetting in the corners is just the way it is, must face the fact that using a smaller sensor will solve the problem and its just what Pentax and Canon have done.
When did this become a discussion of pixel-pitch? It doesn't have anything to do with the discussion at all. No one seems to know why Canon only went with 18MP; perhaps the relatively large pixels are actually the only way to go to astronomical ISO levels in real life, despite the fact that theory suggests otherwise.Canons new FF sensor does have larger pixels that help greatly in capturing light? Can anyone tell me why Canon says this gives an image quality benefit or used smaller than FF and bigger than APS before?
I do think there is room for improvement and do think APS has it's place (I use an APS-C camera), but that doesn't change the fact that FF is better in every image quality metric. Physics can't be overturned here and bigger will always be better when it comes to image sensors. This doesn't mean that smaller sensors can't continue to be improved on of course, and we're at the point where some APS-C sensors are better than older FF models.If anyone thinks there is no room for thought, no room for improvment (even if smaller is making an improvment of something) or to ask why, you will not progress. You must have an open and clear mind.
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The fact is that it's not most lenses, but few others. You have to cherrypick the very worst ones to prove your point, which effectively disproves your point.Whoops, well not that lens but some others..OK how about a modern Nikon 3DX FX with a 1990s film lens. SLRgear also has examples if you want to look. But I have seen enough through my research to know overall film lens on FF digital sensors will never perform as well as on a APS sensor. Moreover the lens may even have aberrations such that it makes little sense to buy it versus a more modern lens (on FF).
http://www.photozone.de/nikon_ff/617-nikkorafd2028ff
I don't think that's a good example of a lens that proves your point, though.
The 20 f/2.8D is sought after by FF shooters because it's very sharp in the center wide-open and very, very small. In fact the 'flaws' of this lens (some vignetting on FF, some distortion, some CA) are more attributable to it's size more than anything else. When you make a very small 20mm f/2.8 lens, some sacrifices get made.
I love the 20mm f/2.8D on FF and it goes with me a lot of places.
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Here are a few of my favorite things...
---> http://www.flickr.com/photos/95095968@N00/sets/72157626171532197/
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Take a read this is 2010 and 2011
http://www.luminous-landscape.com/essays/an_open_letter_to_the_major_camera_manufacturers.shtml
Below is a quote from the links article.
"The DxO measurements to date prove that the marginal light rays just don’t hit the sensor.."
Does anyone have hard core scientific data to back statements of "its not a problem anymore". What breakthrough made it not a problem?
From DxO "We can suspect,” Guichard continued, “that sensors collect the incoming light all the more improperly, in that this light comes from a more oblique angle. Since faster lens have, by definition, a wider opening, they raise the proportion of oblique light, hence the proportion of lost energy which never lands on the pixels.”
http://www.dxomark.com/index.php/Publications/DxOMark-Insights/F-stop-blues
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Agree, you have said things I have never thought of. I really do agree 100%! And at least you understand agree or not what I was trying to say about old film lens on FF Digital sensors.I am not going to dispute the lens phenomenon as this may be applicable to some lenses and some Pentax lenses in particular. It could be a factor in the Pentax decision making process as they feel that they may need to make a complete lens line for FF due to what you have stated. Who knows? However, I think the reason that Pentax has not gone FF is due more to market share and lack of sales of a potential FF Pentax camera. As it stands, Pentax only has about 5% of the market even with APS C, so a FF market would possibly only be 5-10% of that 5%!! Tiny at best, I do believe.
Pentax has long been a camera company that concentrates on smaller cameras and to go FF, a DSLR will need to be large. However, this all depends on what the major two brands end up doing themselves with regards to the price of FF sensors. If FF sensors end up allowing Nikon and Canon to produce a small FF DSLR, then we may see one from Pentax, but this depends on a number of factors.
Unless the cost of FF sensors reducing to a level where a manufacturer can make one for the price of an advanced amateur level APS C camera, I do not think you will see a FF camera that is smaller than they are now and even then I think they may be pushing it depending on features of the FF camaera compared to the top spec APS C version. Why? Because they are made for pros and semi pros users first and therefore need to be made to withstand the rogours of pro use. Therefore, to withstand the rogours of pro use, they use heavy, more robust materials and have features and facilities that are what pros require. For a start, the mirror box needs to be bigger to accommodate the large mirror and shutter assembly, so this part of the camera needs enlarging to start with.
It's not a case of whether they can make one small enough so much, that is the deciding factor, it is whether they can justify the tiny market share that a small bodies, possibly "dumbed" down FF camera would attract. In other words, the market for a FF camera of this sort compared to those who would rather fork out for a top spec APS C camera are very limited, IMO.
For pro use, things like the lens mount area is more robust, stronger chasis, heavier plastics used, weather sealed, more robust switchgear and buttons, larger buttons so that pros are not fumbling about trying to press a tiny button because the camera is small, etc, etc. The mirror needs more damping and the actuation gear more robust than that of an APS C camera. A more powerful inbuilt flash which requires a larger capacitor - I saw the guts of a DSLR and the capacior for the flash was huge in relationship to the camera. It was about 40mm long and 16-18mm in diameter!! All of this stuff takes up room and adds weight.
In order to make a FF camera small, it needs to then be attractive to amateurs at a cost basis and I just can't see this happening until FF sensors are way cheaper than they are now. Added to this, to get long lens benefits they have to fork out for a 300mm instead of a 200mm on APS C or a 600 over a 400etc. So, the amatuer needs to factor in that fact that long lenses cost more as well!
So, until sensors are cheaper, then FF cameras will be made for pros because they cost more and they are made to suit their requirements. There will be a very limited market for advanced amateurs forking out money for a "dumbed" down FF camera that is less than robust. There will be less features as to have all the features adds weight and cost. The pros won't buy them as they need the more advanced tougher camera for the pro work as well as all the features that tye use now. Most normal amatuers will stick with APS C as they do not need FF,APS C is smaller and lighter and fulfills 99% of their needs, and lond lenses cost more. So, there will be no market in most of the amateur ranks.
The only market I can see is for a few advanced amatuers and they will quickly abandon the "dumbed down" FF camera as they will quckly learn that it is limited. I think the market is too small for such a camera even if FF sensors were cheap enough and I think Nikon and Canon realise this. Why sell a D3100 type camera when a camera like the D700 is such a market smash hit that suits many markets, ie pros and advanced amateurs.
The IQ from the current K-5 is remarkable anyway, and I doubt that most would tell the difference between it and many FF images even up to A3.
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Lance B
http://www.pbase.com/lance_b
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Have you ever heard of halo products? People often buy into certain companies because of successful flagship models, even if they don't buy that model themselves. The D300 was a great camera, but the D3 and associated FF lenses are the reason many professionals moved back to Canon. They would have sold quite a few D300s anyways, but the D3 and D700 are why Nikon are back where they are.Pull your head out of that place you put it, the FX format had nothign to do with Nikon's resurgence, they would have sold and by a very large margin more D300's, then the D3(s,x) and D700 combined.
Canon wasn't exactly releasing crap in 2007.Their resurgence was because the release several very good products and several cheap camera bodies at a time when their competitor (Canon) was releasing crap.
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Chris.
A weather sealed ultra wide, is that too much to ask?
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/chriside
GMT +9.5
Pentax SLR talk FAQ
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1036&message=23161072
Your links don't refer to what you say they were. They complain that the microlenses that cover the entire sensor don't properly pick up the light given by lenses with apertures larger than f/2 because the microlenses themselves have small(ish) apertures. The effect is that the cameras electronically have to boost the ISO to compensate. This occurs with all cameras and is especially problematic with small pixels, hence why APS-C cameras are WORSE in this case than FF. This means that unfortunately for me, my 7D with my 24/1.4 is much worse than a 5D2 with a 35/2.Read my post a few up that links to DXO and LLandscape, you may be shocked to find even today's sensors don't pick up light coming at the micro lens at a steep angle.That was probably true 10 years ago like you indicates. But technology has advanced and the internal optical systems especially the micro–lenses had advanced, and now are able to cope better at those extreme angles. So a sensor with current & up to date technology no longer have to show luminance vignetting and/or decreases in resolution in the outer zones or extreme corners if its micro-lenses are designed properly for those angles.
Again, you are misunderstanding what you are reading. Also, you keep saying that APS-C cameras crop the edges of lenses. This is true if you are using 35mm lenses, but many times this isn't happening. When you are using a APS-C lens (EF-S in Canon speak, I'm not sure what Pentax calls them, but I understand most lenses released by them in a decade or so are APS-C) you aren't cropping out the edges. This means you have the same issue as FF.DXO and Luminous Landscape have shown the problem even worse than I thought! Can you imagine a FF lens on a FF digital sensor. With APS the edges are cropped out. So there work is for all cameras and digital lens but it shows there is still a problem even with microlens in gathering light.
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I agree with this, in that James has misunderstood. However, the DxO discussion is more about well depth than microlenses.Your links don't refer to what you say they were. They complain that the microlenses that cover the entire sensor don't properly pick up the light given by lenses with apertures larger than f/2 because the microlenses themselves have small(ish) apertures. The effect is that the cameras electronically have to boost the ISO to compensate. This occurs with all cameras and is especially problematic with small pixels, hence why APS-C cameras are WORSE in this case than FF. This means that unfortunately for me, my 7D with my 24/1.4 is much worse than a 5D2 with a 35/2.Read my post a few up that links to DXO and LLandscape, you may be shocked to find even today's sensors don't pick up light coming at the micro lens at a steep angle.That was probably true 10 years ago like you indicates. But technology has advanced and the internal optical systems especially the micro–lenses had advanced, and now are able to cope better at those extreme angles. So a sensor with current & up to date technology no longer have to show luminance vignetting and/or decreases in resolution in the outer zones or extreme corners if its micro-lenses are designed properly for those angles.
No need to imagine it. Many thousands of photographers use FF lenses on FF bodies with outstanding resullts. My son, for example, has been using his 5D since it first came out (so pretty old-fashioned by digital standards) without ever bemoaning the problems you claim to exist.DXO and Luminous Landscape have shown the problem even worse than I thought! Can you imagine a FF lens on a FF digital sensor. With APS the edges are cropped out. So there work is for all cameras and digital lens but it shows there is still a problem even with microlens in gathering light.
In fact any prime lens longer and wider than about 35/2.8 covers the FF image circle: it's just the way things are. Some lenses (wider primes and some zooms) have circles bigger than 28mm, too, so they crop the softer areas away.Again, you are misunderstanding what you are reading. Also, you keep saying that APS-C cameras crop the edges of lenses. This is true if you are using 35mm lenses, but many times this isn't happening. When you are using a APS-C lens (EF-S in Canon speak, I'm not sure what Pentax calls them, but I understand most lenses released by them in a decade or so are APS-C) you aren't cropping out the edges. This means you have the same issue as FF.
It is as if APS-C were totally unsatisfactory to a great many people. If I want shallower depth of field, I'd think the 645D would do that job even better than so-called full frame.Me too, I would be willing to tolerate the faults of old FF lenses in corners, for the added creative benefit of shallower DOF. And my vintage zooms starting at 28mm would become much more interesting. I would still keep one APS-C Pentax at hand anyway.I still want a FF!![]()
That's a common legend, but once you consider the fact that the aperture should also be changed in order to be truly equivalent, there is not so much differences in price/size/weight between the two systems, and FF even often costs less for similar performances (or offers unique possibilities)...In order to make a FF camera small, it needs to then be attractive to amateurs at a cost basis and I just can't see this happening until FF sensors are way cheaper than they are now. Added to this, to get long lens benefits they have to fork out for a 300mm instead of a 200mm on APS C or a 600 over a 400etc. So, the amatuer needs to factor in that fact that long lenses cost more as well!