gaz_jameison
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I own a D3100 and I see a lot of other people who own the same nikon as me are all talking about upgrading to a FF body. Only thing is I can't work out why.
Can anyone explain why? Are they better sensors? Do they produce 'better' pictures? Do you have to change all ur DX lenses?
If you don't know why you need it then you don't need it at all![]()
If you don't know why you need it then you don't need it at all
FF dose off more dynamic range , good at low lights . But won't work with dx lens ( you can mount them but not all of sensor is been used ). Offer less DOF at any given aperture compare to dx lens ( some people think it is a good thing thought).
I suggest you wait until your current camera out grown you before think about move to FF.
Stupid expression that. If he doesn't know the difference, it just means he doesn't know the difference. He may well need the benefits a FF sensor will give... but just doesn't know that a FF sensor will give them to him.
Does here therefore not need it? He may well be sitting there thinking "I need more sharpness" or "I need a shallower DOF"... but because he doesn't know what gives it to him, he doesn't need it? LOL
Cheers mpe. What advantages does a cropped sensor have over full frame, would you say?
mpe said:Cropped sensor cameras are cheaper, smaller and lighter. They can prevent vignetting and extreme corner softness when used with 35mm format lenses (you use the best part of the lens).
Cropped cameras have generally higher pixel density that means, they can increase effective reach of your lenses. 300mm effectively becomes 450mm when used on 12mpx cropped camera compared to 12mpx full-frame camera.
This is great for wild-life photography where the reach of your lens is normally what is limiting you most. (The Nikon D800 is a kind of exception from this rule as it unique as it has quite a high pixel density in full-frame format).
And there's a number who are drifting to micro 4/3rds for a similar but different set of benefits. I "know" - i.e. they are around on several fora - of quite a few excellent photographers & a few pros that have jumped ship to micro 4/3rds simply due to the size advantage and the fact that excellent lenses are being produced for the format which compensate somewhat for the smaller sensor size.Another reason is that high-end cameras are no longer made in crop format and many new pro-lenses are designed and optimised for 35mm format. That's why many advanced photographers (non-pro enthusiasts) are drifting toward full-frame format.
Megapixels have nothing to do with the amount of "reach".
gaz_jameison said:I own a D3100 and I see a lot of other people who own the same nikon as me are all talking about upgrading to a FF body. Only thing is I can't work out why.
Megapixels have nothing to do with the amount of "reach".
Megapixels have nothing to do with the amount of "reach".
Crop sensors add apparent reach, so a 300mm lens on a Nikon crop body has the same AoV as a 450mm lens has on a Full Frame body..
Cropped sensor cameras are cheaper, smaller and lighter. They can prevent vignetting and extreme corner softness when used with 35mm format lenses (you use the best part of the lens).
Sorry, crop does not add anything. It is just a crop. You can crop your picture in photoshop and you don't call that adding reach. You are just taking out pixels. A pixel density plays a role there, not the crop factor.