What it all comes down to is that a 400mm lens is a 400mm lens, whether on a
16mm Minox or an 8x10 field camera.  The only difference is the amount of
the image circle visible to the light sensitive media.

Bill

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "J. C. O'Connell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, December 12, 2003 5:52 PM
Subject: RE: New Pentax DSLR next year


> WRONG
> Im tired of explaining it to you. When using a small sensor,
> 24x36mm or less, there will be ZERO difference in field of view,
> depth of field, apparent magnification etc. etc. between a 645 400mm lens
> and a 35mm 400mm lens.
> PERIOD. This isnt theory, this is real.
> jco
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
>    J.C. O'Connell   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://jcoconnell.com
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Bill D. Casselberry [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, December 12, 2003 5:31 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: New Pentax DSLR next year
>
>
> "J. C. O'Connell" wrote:
>
> > There IS NOT an "apparent" optical difference if both
> > lenses are the same 400mm FL!
>
> Consumers don't care about physics!  The in-camera crop
> of the smaller than nominal fullframe sensor yields on
> the memory card the same effect as cranking up the enlarger
> head to project just the cenrtal area of a regular negative.
> That cropped image is what the see and what they get. Again,
> DOF, resolution, etc are not part of my point - just that
> the end result on the media has a longer reach.
>
> Bill
>
>         ---------------------------------------------------------
>         Bill D. Casselberry ; Photography on the Oregon Coast
>
>                                 http://www.orednet.org/~bcasselb
>                                 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>         ---------------------------------------------------------
>
>


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