Because an APS-C sensor is smaller than a full-frame sensor, the APS-C lens is designed to project a smaller image circle than a non-APS-C lens, but focal length is a physical measurement, so remains unchanged regardless of the size of the sensor. In general, cameras always lose part of the image as a circular lens projects a circular image.
Es decir, un 50mm en una cámara Full Frame será un 50mm real. Pero en una cámara APS-C, para conocer la distancia focal efectiva, deberemos multiplicar ese valor por 1,5x (Nikon) o 1,6x (Canon). por lo tanto, un 50mm en una cámara APS-C tiene una distancia focal efectiva de 75mm u 80mm dependiendo del factor de multiplicación que utilicemos.
Re: Full Sensor 24mp vs Apsc 32.5 Help. In reply to Califmike33 • Apr 20, 2021. 1. While it may be a "wash" for images of a similar view in the wideangle, normal and short telephoto range once you start to get into the longer telephoto range the 32.5 MP crop will absolutely resolve far more than the 24 MP FF.
For example, placing a 50mm lens on an APS-C camera will give us a field of view equivalent to a much longer lens on a full-frame camera. For a Canon APS-C camera, that would be 1.6×50 = 80mm. In other words, a 50mm lens on an APS-C camera delivers the same field of view as an 80mm lens on a full-frame camera.
The E 11mm F1.8 is a compact large aperture, ultra-wide APS-C prime lens designed for vloggers and shooting video on the go. With a 35mm full-frame equivalent of 16.5mm, this lens delivers outstanding corner-to-corner resolution, gorgeous bokeh and fast, reliable AF for dramatic expression and stunning selfie-style content.
. Full-Frame vs APS-C vs M43 vs CX Lens Size / System Size. Now take another look at the first image in this article and the above image and note just how much of the photograph is getting chopped off. Manufacturers quickly realized that there were advantages to using smaller sensors.
As you can see, when shooting at the same focal length on a full-frame vs. APS-C sensor, the frame area is significantly different. The viewing angle also changes on a crop sensor. Therefore it would be incorrect to say that the 50mm on APS-C is same as 75mm (50mm x 1.6 crop factor) on a FX camera.
Check out the full-frame list as well because some of those lenses are of great value and work very well for APS-C. The Rokinon APS-C lenses are actually very good. They are all manual focus right now, but if you want really high-quality glass at a pretty affordable price and you like manual focus, these are going to give you the best results.
The crop factor of an APS-C sensor is, generally speaking, about 1.5. That means a FF sensor is 1.5 times wider and 1.5 times taller than an APS-C sensor. When you take a photo with a 50mm f/2 lens on a FF camera it has a certain field of view and a certain depth of field.
Incidentally, this is the point that your linked article is making. If you hold the angle of view, and the aperture diameter fixed (e.g. they used a 50mm f/4 lens on full frame, and a 25mm f/2 lens on 4/3rds), the depth of field will be the same for the same composition (meaning equal focus distances, aspect ratio, and framing).
full frame vs aps c lens conversion