J-see does that to people.

It's a function of having to be right even when what you're saying is technically incorrect. Because we've gone over this ad nauseum in post after post about crop factors, and have documented until the cows come home that there is no "magnification" of images by a DX sensor. "Magnification" is an optical process that involves the enlarging of something, which
does not happen in a DX body. What
does happen is that the DX sensor packs more pixels into a smaller area, so while nothing is "magnified", there is a finer grain of light information being captured within the same space.
Oh, dammit, let me do this one more time.
A sensor is made up of pixels which are spread out evenly over the entire area. An FX sensor is 36mm x 24mm, which is essentially the same size as a piece of 35mm film, hence the full frame designation. A Nikon DX sensor is 24mm x 16mm. This graphic shoes the relative sizes, with FX area being the full 36x24 box (each box represents 1mm), and the DX area being the white center 24x16 section...
When an images is projected through a full frame lens it covers the entire area.
A FX camera will capture the entire scene, though it does have the ability to shoot in
DX Mode. Were it to do the latter it would simply crop out the darker shaded area in-camera. The resulting FX and DX mode images would have identical resolution and the DX image would be a pixel-for-pixel match to the FX image for the common areas. In other words, were you to take the 36x24 FX image and crop out the center portion in Photoshop you would wind up with the
exact same image as you would get in DX mode. In plain numbers, a 24 megapixel FX camera uses all 24 million pixels in FX mode, but only around 10.667 million pixels in DX mode.
The thing is that DX sensors are generally not packed full of pixels in the same manner. My D610 is a 24MP FX camera. My D7100 is a 24MP DX camera.
Both sensors have 24 million pixels, so it stands to reason that if the DX sensor is that much smaller then those 24 million pixels must also be smaller in order to fit the same number of pixels in a much smaller area.
This is what confuses people like J-See and others. Because when I now use the
exact same lens on the DX sensor, the area that would normally be captured by a full frame camera is simply ignored, while the center portion is now captured by 1.5X more pixels than it had been in DX mode on an FX camera...
Nothing is magnified!! If nothing else the opposite happens - pixels are shrunk!!
But, the thing is that once the exposure happens, a pixel is a pixel is a pixel and 24 million pixels of light information are equivalent from an amount of information point of view - the fact that the DX sensors are smaller does not matter from an image size perspective (though it does matter in terms of the light information that theycapture - but that's another lecture). So when we compare the two images...
FX Capture:
DX Capture:
...it appears as if the lens used on the DX camera was 1.5x the focal length of the one used on the FX camera. This is where we get
Focal Length Equivalence. If both images were shot with the
exact same 50mm lens, on the DX camera it
looks like it was shot by a 75mm lens -
but it wasn't, and more importantly
nothing was ever magnified!!
What happened is that the exact same number of pixels were just crammed into a smaller area, yielding a final image of equal resolution, but with a different overall field of view. So yes, the final DX image
looks magnified, but
absolutely no magnification occurs!!!
Yes, it seems trivial to pick on a term, but dammit, that's what language is about. When you say that "DX magnifies the image" that has a specific meaning in optics, that some sort of manipulation occurs with the bits of light projected from the back of the lens
before it reaches the sensor. That's
not what happens, so no, it's not magnified. It's merely a smaller portion of the image interpreted at a higher resolution.
So, for the love of God,
stop saying it's magnified!!! Why?!
Because it's wrong!!!
Now I know you don't care about being wrong when you think you're right - we've been through that before. And what bothers me is that more than that you don't care about misinforming people when you're wrong but think you're right. Well, I do care, because it perpetuates misinformation and ignorance, and God knows we have enough of that.