Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2013/06/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]My graduate student of 20 years ago, formerly a senior imaging engineer at Kodak, now a professor of imaging science at the Rochester Institute of Technology, tells me that Kodak found few image quality differences between APS-C and Micro 4/3 sensors despite the hype in the media. Most manufacturers using APS-C (Sony, Nikon, Fuji, even Leica) do so because of the lack of legal restrictions. With APS-C each camera maker is free to use its own proprietary lens mount, locking the buyer into that makers lenses. Apparently to use Micro 4/3 you have to join the club and adhere to all the requirements of the format. But you can use lenses from Olympus, Panasonic and Leica interchangablly. Smart Leica has a foot in both camps. He was less encouraging about the prospect of full frame sensors in the lower priced ILC cameras than many on the LUG list. The small lens to sensor distance of these cameras tends to produce the same problems of even illumination as Leica encountered with the M8 and M9. It can be fixed with microlens arrays but it is expensive. It is much easier to use micro 4/3 or APS-C sensors. There are few legacy lenses to support with those sizes except for die hards like me and Jim Nichols that want to use their old film lenses with adapters.? His prediction is that for the next year or so ILCs will get smaller but retain sensor sizes in the APS-C or micro 4/3 size, possibly incorporating electronic viewfinders. No affordable full frame digital Rollei 35 for the next couple of years. But then he could be wrong. After all, he worked for Kodak. Larry Z