Monday, August 15, 2011
Digital 101 Lesson 9
did you know that many if not most prosummer dslr cameras had a crop factor? this is because their sensors are smaller than a full frame sensor which would equivalent in size to a 35mm negative. the average camera has a "C" sensor that magnifies the focal length of the lens by 1.6. the other popular sensor is the "H" that has a crop factor of 1.3. what's it mean? if you had a 50mm lens (considered normal on a 35mm film camera of full frame sensor) it would magnified by the crop factor of the type of camera that you were using. a 50mm would become a 80mm with a C sensor. this great for sports but becomes a little awkward in tight quarters. another problem is the slowest shutter speed that you can safely use hand held before creating body movement. the general rule is 1/the focal length of the lens. 1/FL in the the case of the 50mm, 1/50 or 1/60. jump to a 200mm telephoto and it becomes 1/200 or 1/250. remember that crop factor? the 50mm is a 80mm on a C or a 65mm on a H camera. the 200mm now becomes either 320mm or a 260mm depending the camera and would require an increase in the shutter speed. bottom line, the longer the lens, the faster the minimum shutter speed required without the aid of a tripod.