B Johannsen
Active member
I have nothing better to do right now, so I was wondering:
The 30D sensor has an area of 3.375 cm2 (2.25cm x 1.50cm) and 8.5 million total pixels. This means that it has 2.52 megapixels per square centimeter.
The FF sensor has an area of 8.556 cm2 (3.58cm x 2.39cm) and 13.3 and 17.2 million total pixels (5D and 1Ds Mark II, respectively). Therefore, 1.55 and 2.01 megapixels per square centimeter.
That’s 1 million more pixels per sq cm on 30D sensor than the 5D sensor and 0.5 million more than the 1Ds sensor. Based on this, a FF sensor need to have 21.56 megapixels to have the same pixel per sq cm ratio than our 1.6 crop snsors.
So, is it correct to assume that our modest, price friendly 30D sensors have a considerable higher resolution than those expensive FFs? Is this a logical statement? Or am I missing something here...
The 30D sensor has an area of 3.375 cm2 (2.25cm x 1.50cm) and 8.5 million total pixels. This means that it has 2.52 megapixels per square centimeter.
The FF sensor has an area of 8.556 cm2 (3.58cm x 2.39cm) and 13.3 and 17.2 million total pixels (5D and 1Ds Mark II, respectively). Therefore, 1.55 and 2.01 megapixels per square centimeter.
That’s 1 million more pixels per sq cm on 30D sensor than the 5D sensor and 0.5 million more than the 1Ds sensor. Based on this, a FF sensor need to have 21.56 megapixels to have the same pixel per sq cm ratio than our 1.6 crop snsors.
So, is it correct to assume that our modest, price friendly 30D sensors have a considerable higher resolution than those expensive FFs? Is this a logical statement? Or am I missing something here...