WHAT IS THE ADVANTAGE OF A FULL FRAME CAMERA I HAVE A 40D AND THINKING OF A UPGRADE .
I don't have to "upgrade" as I have one already![]()
WHAT IS THE ADVANTAGE OF TYPING IN CAPITAL LETTERS? WHY ARE YOU SHOUTING AT ME?
Aaaannndd...The larger the sensor, the less hard the lenses have to work. A lens has a finite amount of resolution available, and can resolve a single point only so far...
Aaaannndd...
The problem is the DSLR manufacturers design their top-of-the-range lenses for their full frame sensors. They design the resolving power for the full frame sensors, so the lenses are sharper on FF over crop.
However....
If you take a different format (say micro 4/3) and design lenses for the format, rather than to the largest sensor that will use them, you will find you can get equivalent resolution on a much smaller sensor.
They design the resolving power for the full frame sensors, so the lenses are sharper on FF over crop
If you take a different format (say micro 4/3) and design lenses for the format, rather than to the largest sensor that will use them, you will find you can get equivalent resolution on a much smaller sensor.
Yes - see below.Do you have a source you can link to to back that up?
No. What I am saying is that due to the larger sensor size, the lenses designed for full frame don't need to be as sharp to produce the same level of sharpness in the image. Whether a manufacturer chooses to design beyond that or not is another matter.What you are suggesting is that the most expensive FF lenses are actually under-designed... made to be not as good as the lenses designed for APS-C or 4/3rd.
No, what I am saying is that with the same lens on different format cameras, you should get the same MTF. When you then print those images to the same size, the sharpness of the smaller sensor will be lower.If what you say is true, then FX lenses when tested on DX cameras should reveal lower MTFs than DX lenses on the same camera... which they don't.
Well, lens design is all about tradeoffs. Making a lens that covers a full frame sensor is much more difficult and expensive than making one for a smaller sensor.If a manufacturer could design and build a lens so sharp that it could make up the difference in sensor size, then they would be implementing that into their professional gear, I promise you.
No. I am saying the same lens on full frame will be sharper than the same lens on crop. That is shown on a number of tests on t'interweb. The problem is that interpreting MTF values can be a little hairy at best as there isn't a standard unit of measurement....You seems to be saying here that FF lenses are sharper....
You're equating quality with sharpness. The micro 4/3rds system needs really fast lenses to get the same sort of shallow depth of field as a full frame, and image noise is higher on micro 4/3 as the sensor is smaller. There's a whole heap of things that go into "image quality".Which seems to suggest that micro 4/3rd lenses are capable of resolving more detail than lenses designed for full frame... so much so that a micro 4/3rd system can deliver the same quality as a full frame system. Which A) is contradicting your first statement, and B) patently not true.
Define better.... all I was commenting on was sharpness. There are areas where micro 4/3ds falls short of larger sensors (tracking autofocus, image noise...), although there are a lot of areas where it wins size and weight being a clear one as is the ability to be spot on with focus for stationary objects (not only is the autofocus blindingly fast, it is 100% spot on every time).If micro 4/3 was the better system, we'd all be using it.
Just saying![]()
I disagree. Just my opinion though.I don't think M 4/3 is better in any way, tbh. Just my opinion though.
If you don't know the advantages of FF, you probably don't need it.
If micro 4/3 was the better system, we'd all be using it.
Just saying![]()
Whilst it isn't 2x as sharp, it is a whole heap sharper, so that when an image taken with the Oly is blown up 2x as large to get to the same size as an image from a full frame, you get an equivalent 41 lp/mm, so the lens will be in the same ballpark as the lens on a full frame sensor. It is close to a 70-200 f2.8 L IS II (which is in the high 40's on FF). Dividing the Canon lens by 1.6 to convert to lines on a printed image from a crop sensor, you're maxing out at 30ish equivalent lines..... So in that case, the print from the micro 4/3 should appear sharper than the print from the crop, but less sharp than the full frame image.
What I am saying is that you can get pretty darned good images out of a micro 4/3 - far better than you would expect due to the sensor size alone
I don't know why people are getting all defensive about a system just because they use it? Isn't this thread about full frame :shrug:
Yes - see below.
No. What I am saying is that due to the larger sensor size, the lenses designed for full frame don't need to be as sharp to produce the same level of sharpness in the image. Whether a manufacturer chooses to design beyond that or not is another matter.
No, what I am saying is that with the same lens on different format cameras, you should get the same MTF. When you then print those images to the same size, the sharpness of the smaller sensor will be lower.
Well, lens design is all about tradeoffs. Making a lens that covers a full frame sensor is much more difficult and expensive than making one for a smaller sensor.
No. I am saying the same lens on full frame will be sharper than the same lens on crop. That is shown on a number of tests on t'interweb. The problem is that interpreting MTF values can be a little hairy at best as there isn't a standard unit of measurement....
Anyway, some figures. The best (IMHO) way to compare lens MTFs across different formats is their ability to resolve line pairs per mm, not lp/ih. So, first up is the MTF of the Canon 100mm f2.8L Macro IS - which is an exceedingly sharp prime:
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It maxes out at just over 50 lp/mm.
Here is the Oly 75mm
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It maxes out at 82 lp/mm.
Whilst it isn't 2x as sharp, it is a whole heap sharper, so that when an image taken with the Oly is blown up 2x as large to get to the same size as an image from a full frame, you get an equivalent 41 lp/mm, so the lens will be in the same ballpark as the lens on a full frame sensor. It is close to a 70-200 f2.8 L IS II (which is in the high 40's on FF). Dividing the Canon lens by 1.6 to convert to lines on a printed image from a crop sensor, you're maxing out at 30ish equivalent lines..... So in that case, the print from the micro 4/3 should appear sharper than the print from the crop, but less sharp than the full frame image.
You're equating quality with sharpness. The micro 4/3rds system needs really fast lenses to get the same sort of shallow depth of field as a full frame, and image noise is higher on micro 4/3 as the sensor is smaller. There's a whole heap of things that go into "image quality".
What I am saying is that you can get pretty darned good images out of a micro 4/3 - far better than you would expect due to the sensor size alone (remember the "better" lenses for crop for Nikon and Canon are in fact the lenses designed for full frame sensors so perform less well on the crop cameras).
Some of us have owned 5D2s with several bits of L glass... and sold them for micro 4/3rds as the difference in quality just wasn't there unless you pixel peeped - and then it is minimal unless you are pushing ISO or need phase detect focus tracking....Some of us just like or want the micro 4/3 systems full stop. I don't honestly care how good it is, no offence. I just know it's not up to FF quality.
No. What I am saying is that due to the larger sensor size, the lenses designed for full frame don't need to be as sharp to produce the same level of sharpness in the image. Whether a manufacturer chooses to design beyond that or not is another matter.
No, what I am saying is that with the same lens on different format cameras, you should get the same MTF. When you then print those images to the same size, the sharpness of the smaller sensor will be lower.
No. I am saying the same lens on full frame will be sharper than the same lens on crop.
Anyway, some figures. The best (IMHO) way to compare lens MTFs across different formats is their ability to resolve line pairs per mm, not lp/ih. So, first up is the MTF of the Canon 100mm f2.8L Macro IS - which is an exceedingly sharp prime:
![]()
It maxes out at just over 50 lp/mm.
Here is the Oly 75mm
![]()
It maxes out at 82 lp/mm.
What I am saying is that you can get pretty darned good images out of a micro 4/3
(remember the "better" lenses for crop for Nikon and Canon are in fact the lenses designed for full frame sensors so perform less well on the crop cameras).

And that is precisely why I used a different measure as those are lp/ih - which depends on the sensor size - the bigger the image height, the more lines you can fit in! Those results cannot be compared across formats, lp/mm can...What you are suggesting is that a lens will give the same result figures regardless of what camera it's attached to. That's is an impossibility.
Nikkor 50mm f.14G on a D200
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Nikkor 50mm 1.4G on a D3X
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No 1DsMk3I have issues with that data you posted... in those figures, the same lens is giving higher resolution figures on a Canon EOS 50D than it does on a Canon 5D MkIII.
At a price. Everything is designed to a price. If you believe the Canon lenses are the best that can be made, regardless of price you are mistaken....This is nonsense. No manufacturer is going to do anything other than produce the best lenses they can in such a competitive field.
No. But how much did it cost.If what you're saying is true, then the Schneider lenses for my large format camera must be really crap then... my "sensor" is 5x4 inches!! Any old piece of crap will do for that then huh?
Have you actually used a micro 4/3rds camera and one of the better lenses for it? As Alan has said, unless you look very closely, they can be difficult to tell apart.You like 4/3rds... why not.. it's a great system with many great reasons for having it... but it simply will not compare to larger sensor systems.
BTW.. I'll take up any print challenge too... whoever mentioned that. I'll pick out a small sensor shot a A3.. easy.
Heh... The viewfinder in my G5 is as big as the viewfinder in the 5D2. And it can display lots of useful graphics on it too...Huge View Finder, Better Quality !!
Yes, but that's the way it works.Isnt the fault here though that the maximum measurement you can get will depend alot on the pixel density?
Yes. It was photos like this (equivalent focal length lenses with equivalent quality):Micro 4/3rds sucess on the other hand seems to rest with exploiting the size advanatge of the smaller sensor more fully.
And that is precisely why I used a different measure as those are lp/ih - which depends on the sensor size -
At a price. Everything is designed to a price. If you believe the Canon lenses are the best that can be made, regardless of price you are mistaken....
No. But how much did it cost.
Have you actually used a micro 4/3rds camera and one of the better lenses for it? As Alan has said, unless you look very closely, they can be difficult to tell apart.
Have a look at this thread: http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3235707 Very little in it - certainly nothing you'd notice unless you knew what you were looking for.
I don't think I have said otherwise (other than APS-C using FF lenses to show why micro 4/3rds punches higher than it shoud) - but that wasn't my point. My point is that for most people, for most of the time, the difference is negligible. And that's where I am - the big benefits of size, and cost far outweigh the small benefits to picture quality.4/3rds is excellent... DX is excellent... but the bigger the sensor, the better the image![]()