Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/11/27

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Subject: [Leica] Leica D lens 4/3rds question.
From: telyt at earthlink.net (telyt@earthlink.net)
Date: Tue Nov 27 08:55:04 2007

Philippe Amard <phamard@numericable.fr> wrote:

> how could reducing the angle result in  a "larger" image is 
> the key to it I guess.

It doesn't.  Reducing the number of variables might help understand crop
factors.  Let's assume the only difference between two cameras is the
physical dimensions of the sensor: both sensors have the same pixel pitch,
bit depth, noise properties, etc.  Same lens, subject-to-camera distance,
everything else.

In this hypothetical example the sensor with larger dimensions would have
more pixels.  Comparing a 4/3 sensor with a 24mm x 36mm sensor (so-called
"full-frame"), the 4/3 sensor has a crop factor of 2, an angle of view half
that of the "full-frame" sensor, and 1/4 as many pixels [ 1/(crop factor^2)
].

Comparing pictures made with the two cameras, the picture made with the
"full-frame" camera will be identical to the picture from the 4/3 camera if
the "full-frame" picture is cropped enough to match the angle of view of
the 4/3 camera.  The 4/3 camera's picture isn't larger; it has a smaller
angle of view as though a lens twice as long (crop factor 2) were used on a
"full-frame" camera.

In reality comparisons aren't this simple because a lens designed for a 4/3
sensor can be optimized for this camera's smaller image circle requirements
resulting in higher resolution, and a smaller sensor pixel pitch can put
more pixels in the image area (sacrificing some noise performance at higher
ISO settings) to take advantage of the 4/3 lens' higher resolution.

IMHO adapting a "full-frame" lens to a 4/3 camera is less than ideal
because, apart from the ergonomic isssues of fully manual operation on a
camera not designed for it, the lens' central performance more often than
not was sacrificed to some degree at the design stage for the sake of
perfomance in the outer areas of the "full-frame" image circle.

IMHO again, a more appropriate comparison of the two cameras would be
comparing prints using optimum parts for each system using lenses designed
for the camera it's used on with equivalent angle of view.

Doug Herr
Birdman of Sacramento
http://www.wildlightphoto.com


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Replies: Reply from kididdoc at cox.net (Steve Barbour) ([Leica] Leica D lens 4/3rds question.)