daralough
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 345
- Name
- Darragh
- Edit My Images
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So unfortunately I have been doing some thinking and have drawn the conclusion that crop bodies gather less light. In clear thinking, this would mean the following:
A full frame body at ISO100, 1/60th shutter at f2.8 should have a brighter exposure than a crop body with the exact same parameters (iso100, 1/60th and the same lens at f2.8)
Is this true? Or have I thought to much?
My explanation comes from this fact, say I have a 70-200mm f2.8 that is focussing an image onto a 35mm sensor, that 35mm sensor has an area of just over 870mm squared, now that quantity of light projected from the rear of the lens into the body is covering the sensors full area, now if I put a crop body onto the same lens, the lens projects the same image and the same quantity of ligh, but the crop sensor is only reading a portion of it equal to the crop sensor size. The ff sensor is about 2.5x bigger than the crop sensor, so essentially when an image is projected from that lens, the ff sensor absorbs all the light it projects, whereas the crop sensor will absorb less due to its smaller area.
So this would mean that because the crop sensor is cropping the image projected from the lens, it is also cropping the total light available, hence the exposure would appear darker. In my head the difference will be minimal, but should still be able to be seen. I know the crop factor would not be the way to work this out mathematically (ie, saying that a crop absorbs 1.6x less light is incorrect because this crop factor comes from the diagonal measurement of the sensor which affects the field of view).
So my thinking is that if a ff sensor is roughly 2.5x bigger than the crop in area, would then ff sensor absorb 2.5x more light?
Sorry for the mighty question, hopefully I haven't opened a can of worms and someone can prove my thinking wrong!
A full frame body at ISO100, 1/60th shutter at f2.8 should have a brighter exposure than a crop body with the exact same parameters (iso100, 1/60th and the same lens at f2.8)
Is this true? Or have I thought to much?
My explanation comes from this fact, say I have a 70-200mm f2.8 that is focussing an image onto a 35mm sensor, that 35mm sensor has an area of just over 870mm squared, now that quantity of light projected from the rear of the lens into the body is covering the sensors full area, now if I put a crop body onto the same lens, the lens projects the same image and the same quantity of ligh, but the crop sensor is only reading a portion of it equal to the crop sensor size. The ff sensor is about 2.5x bigger than the crop sensor, so essentially when an image is projected from that lens, the ff sensor absorbs all the light it projects, whereas the crop sensor will absorb less due to its smaller area.
So this would mean that because the crop sensor is cropping the image projected from the lens, it is also cropping the total light available, hence the exposure would appear darker. In my head the difference will be minimal, but should still be able to be seen. I know the crop factor would not be the way to work this out mathematically (ie, saying that a crop absorbs 1.6x less light is incorrect because this crop factor comes from the diagonal measurement of the sensor which affects the field of view).
So my thinking is that if a ff sensor is roughly 2.5x bigger than the crop in area, would then ff sensor absorb 2.5x more light?
Sorry for the mighty question, hopefully I haven't opened a can of worms and someone can prove my thinking wrong!
