On my DX body, 50mm didn't provide the same look as it did on film. 1.5x for crop sensors.
That's the 'crop factor'..... it only affects field of view. It was still a 50mm lens.
On my DX body, 50mm didn't provide the same look as it did on film. 1.5x for crop sensors.
That's the 'crop factor'..... it only affects field of view. It was still a 50mm lens.
I'm sorry if you still don't understand my point. Yes, a 50 is always a 50, but the pic is still not the same on DX as FX. That's what I was talking about. FX is like film was. Maybe you are too young to have shot a thousand rolls of 35mm film, but if you had done it, then you know a 50mm lens produced a "normal" field of view, but on DX bodies that same lens was more of a zoom.
I'm sorry if you still don't understand my point. Yes, a 50 is always a 50, but the pic is still not the same on DX as FX. That's what I was talking about. FX is like film was. Maybe you are too young to have shot a thousand rolls of 35mm film, but if you had done it, then you know a 50mm lens produced a "normal" field of view, but on DX bodies that same lens was more of a zoom.
All three of us have said exactly the same thing... it's a different field of view. I don't even know what the dispute is here.
Well, I haven't called a 50mm a zoom lens. I'm just attempting to disseminate correct information by using proper terminology.
Implying a 50mm isn't 50mm on a DX format camera merely confounds and confuses noobs all the more. I can't recall how many times I've corrected the incorrect statement of "50mm on a crop sensor makes it a 75mm lens."
I'm not saying you're wrong... just using partial truths and parroting poor examples.
All three of us have said exactly the same thing... it's a different field of view. I don't even know what the dispute is here.
Like many others, I am totally happy with my D600. It joined my D7000, so the learning curve was almost flat. In addition to what the others have mentioned, I like that I can turn Auto ISO off and on by pressing the ISO button and rotating the front dial. Nifty little feature.
Since I have mine set to ISO 100 most of the time... this little gem of a feature is really great. I hate dumpster diving into menus to turn on or off a commonly used feature.
I find it very convenient to have the front dial set to aperture and the back dial set to ISO so I don't have to push any buttons at all
I just wish I could remember to set my ISO back to 200 on my D90 when set it for low light conditions.:grief: I’m getting better, but….