Whiskeyman
Senior Member
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.
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Only on a DX sensor camera.
WM
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.
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... 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?
The whole "equivalence" thing is kinda' silly. It should just be obvious to a serious photographer that you will get a narrower field of view with a crop sensor camera, and greater depth of field, than the same focal length lens provides on a full frame camera. People who buy point and shoots that they use a couple of times a year really don't care about the numbers, do they? I dunno', maybe they do and that's why the marketing people came out with all the 35mm film lens equivalents.![]()
no, a 300mm lens is a 300mm lens, it's a fixed mathematical value.
A 35mm DX lens on a DX body has a FoV of 43.50° while a 35mm FX on an FX body has a FoV of 63.50°. That same FX lens on a DX body also has a FoV of 43.50°. It's not the lens that affects the FoV here, it's smaller sensor.
Nikon | Imaging Products | NIKKOR Lens Simulator
Depth of field is a function of many things, however, sensor size does not matter for any particular lens focal length.
This isn't always the case. Lenses are designed for many things, and one of the characteristics of any particular lens design is the image circle.
The whole "equivalence" thing is kinda' silly. It should just be obvious to a serious photographer that you will get a narrower field of view with a crop sensor camera, and greater depth of field, than the same focal length lens provides on a full frame camera. People who buy point and shoots that they use a couple of times a year really don't care about the numbers, do they? I dunno', maybe they do and that's why the marketing people came out with all the 35mm film lens equivalents.![]()
No, not at all.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?
6. The optimum is always to use native combinations of camera and lens, when available.
No. However, if you value certain characteristics no matter size, weight and three times the price, yes, then there are always personal choices which do not fit a generalized and somewhat compromised optimum, including a balanced range of variables.
Can we see a few more Nikon 300 F4 VR pics in this thread?
Please?
Can we see a few more Nikon 300 F4 VR pics in this thread?
Please?