Tony is right:... Well ime lost now ...
lol. How does putting a 300mm Dx lens (55-300) differ from putting a 300mm fx lens(70-300) shooting wildlife? They both will give you the same fov.Tony is right:
For everyday photography where you can get close enough to your subject: USE 1 SERIES LENSES ON 1 SERIES BODIES, DX LENSES ON DX BODIES, FX LENSES ON FX BODIES, ETC.
For wildlife where you can not get close enough to your subjects AND YOUR CAMERA DOES NOT OFFER A LENS WITH SUFFICIENT REACH, you can put a larger format lens on a smaller format camera to take advantage of the cropping factor. Just remember that the smaller format sensors do produce a lower IQ image. That's why DxO insists on testing lenses on cameras for an accurate assessment of the overall IQ expressed in P-MP or perceptual mega pixels.
On what camera(s)?... How does ... a 300mm Dx lens (55-300) differ from ... a 300mm fx lens(70-300) shooting wildlife?
what difference does it make? You say that a dx lens will get you closer than an fx lens being the same focal lenght. I say, horse hockey.On what camera(s)?
Well ime lost now,i thought i was saying a FX lens on a crop of any size was a good idea,i also thought thats what the video said,i also thought you said it wasn't,to repeat myself ime lost nowmind you i was only talking wildlife.
Sorry, I meant you said an Fx lens will get you closer then a Dx lens..Im postingg on my cell phonewhat difference does it make? You say that a dx lens will get you closer than an fx lens being the same focal lenght. I say, horse hockey.
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DX specific lenses are already rated at their actual focal length... Thus a 300mm DX lens on a DX body should have the same FOV as a 300mm FX lens on an FX body. That's what you're trying to say, right @Blacktop?
A "35mm DX lens" does not have a physical focal length of 35mm but a physical focal length of 52.5mm, which is why it "becomes" a longer lens when you put it on an FX camera.
Yes J-see, 52.5 mm.
That's not very accurate. A 35mm Nikon has an effective focal length of 35mm whether it is a DX or FX format. Only the FoV changes depending the sensor used and the FoV of a 35mm on a DX is roughly the equivalent of a 52mm lens used on an FX.
The effective focal length does not change regardless which Nikon you put the lens on.
That's not very accurate. A 35mm Nikon has an effective focal length of 35mm whether it is a DX or FX format. Only the FoV changes depending the sensor used and the FoV of a 35mm on a DX is roughly the equivalent of a 52mm lens used on an FX.
The effective focal length does not change regardless which Nikon you put the lens on.
Like I said, the whole equivalence thing is needlessly confusing and basically matters nothing at all. Whether you have an FX or DX; you take the shot you have in mind and if that's a certain equivalent FOV; focal length or equivalent aperture is of zero importance.