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#1
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
I am going crazy with this. Two lenses, side by side. A Pentax DA L
70-300 lens, and Sigma 18-250 DC lens. The DA in Pentax means it's designed for APS-C sensors, and the same with the DC on the Sigma lens. Why do they have nothing close to the same field of view & magnification at the same focal length? To get the same photo with both lenses, I need to set the Pentax to 170mm, and the Sigma to 250mm. When I do that, and then look at the two identical photos in LR, the exif data shows the Pentax set at 170, with a 255mm 35mm equivalent, and the Sigma at 250, with a 375mm 35mm equivalent, which is correct, I guess, but the Pentax has much greater magnification at *equal* focal lengths. Can someone explain this to me? I am thinking of buying the Sigma 18-300 - also a DC lens, but it now appears that the Pentax would still have greater magnification (375mm equivalent). How can one compare the actual magnification of different lenses on paper? It's obvious in this case that one needs to multiply the Pentax focal length by 1.5, which is expected, but not the Sigma. How can I know that going forward, and looking at other lenses? |
#2
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
Bill W wrote:
I am going crazy with this. Two lenses, side by side. A Pentax DA L 70-300 lens, and Sigma 18-250 DC lens. The DA in Pentax means it's designed for APS-C sensors, and the same with the DC on the Sigma lens. Why do they have nothing close to the same field of view & magnification at the same focal length? To get the same photo with both lenses, I need to set the Pentax to 170mm, and the Sigma to 250mm. When I do that, and then look at the two identical photos in LR, the exif data shows the Pentax set at 170, with a 255mm 35mm equivalent, and the Sigma at 250, with a 375mm 35mm equivalent, which is correct, I guess, but the Pentax has much greater magnification at *equal* focal lengths. Can someone explain this to me? I am thinking of buying the Sigma 18-300 - also a DC lens, but it now appears that the Pentax would still have greater magnification (375mm equivalent). How can one compare the actual magnification of different lenses on paper? It's obvious in this case that one needs to multiply the Pentax focal length by 1.5, which is expected, but not the Sigma. How can I know that going forward, and looking at other lenses? Which cameras are you using? Note that at the same focusing distance and the same actual focal length, the "magnification" will be identical. Just be aware that magnification means the comparison of the projected image to the actualy object's size. It has nothing to do with the size of the image you get! You might post a couple images, one from each camera/lens, to a webpage or to alt.binaries.photos.original. If we could download the image and look at Exif data it would help. -- Floyd L. Davidson http://www.apaflo.com/ Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) |
#3
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
In article , Bill W
wrote: I am going crazy with this. Two lenses, side by side. A Pentax DA L 70-300 lens, and Sigma 18-250 DC lens. The DA in Pentax means it's designed for APS-C sensors, and the same with the DC on the Sigma lens. Why do they have nothing close to the same field of view & magnification at the same focal length? To get the same photo with both lenses, I need to set the Pentax to 170mm, and the Sigma to 250mm. When I do that, and then look at the two identical photos in LR, the exif data shows the Pentax set at 170, with a 255mm 35mm equivalent, and the Sigma at 250, with a 375mm 35mm equivalent, which is correct, I guess, but the Pentax has much greater magnification at *equal* focal lengths. that's called focus breathing, where the actual focal length changes as you focus on closer subjects. lots of zoom lenses do it, especially superzooms like the sigma. try comparing with it focused at infinity. |
#4
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
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#5
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
On 2015-08-28 02:23:30 +0000, Bill W said:
I am going crazy with this. Two lenses, side by side. A Pentax DA L 70-300 lens, and Sigma 18-250 DC lens. The DA in Pentax means it's designed for APS-C sensors, and the same with the DC on the Sigma lens. Why do they have nothing close to the same field of view & magnification at the same focal length? To get the same photo with both lenses, I need to set the Pentax to 170mm, and the Sigma to 250mm. When I do that, and then look at the two identical photos in LR, the exif data shows the Pentax set at 170, with a 255mm 35mm equivalent, and the Sigma at 250, with a 375mm 35mm equivalent, which is correct, I guess, but the Pentax has much greater magnification at *equal* focal lengths. Can someone explain this to me? I am thinking of buying the Sigma 18-300 - also a DC lens, but it now appears that the Pentax would still have greater magnification (375mm equivalent). How can one compare the actual magnification of different lenses on paper? It's obvious in this case that one needs to multiply the Pentax focal length by 1.5, which is expected, but not the Sigma. How can I know that going forward, and looking at other lenses? Some clarification is need: What camera are you using? To what purpose are you going to put these lenses. An occasional longer range lens, or wider range walk-around lens? Focal length is not magnification. A typical APS-C sensored camera is going to have a x1.5 35mm equivalence (x1.3 for Canons). Did you mean Sigma 18-250mm or Sigma 18-300mm? Both are general purpose "super zooms" and as such have to make some compromises. Both have a macro feature and have a corresponding macro magnification ratio 1:3 for both of them. There is a Pentax equivalent in their Pentax DA 18-270mm f/3.5-6.3 @ $447 from B&H. Pentax doesn't seem to have a 70-300mm, they have a 55-300mm. It is not a macro lens and thus has a max magnification of 0.28x. You can't compare the two brands for magnification based on total specs, one with a macro feature and one without. Personally unless I needed/wanted a macro feature I would go with the Pentax 55-300mm, the HD Pentax DA 55-300mm f/4-5.8 ED WA is also weather sealed. ....and for $290 from B&H it looks like bargain. So, what lenses are you actually looking at, and what do you want to use them for, and what sort of budget constraints do you have? -- Regards, Savageduck |
#6
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
Bill W wrote:
Note that at the same focusing distance and the same actual focal length, the "magnification" will be identical. Just be aware that magnification means the comparison of the projected image to the actualy object's size. It has nothing to do with the size of the image you get! Yes, and magnification is probably not the ideal term for what I mean. It might be! If you are using the same camera for two different lenses, the difference you see actually is magnification. You might post a couple images, one from each camera/lens, to a webpage or to alt.binaries.photos.original. If we could download the image and look at Exif data it would help. I'll try to do that, unless the whole issue turns out to be what nospam said - focus breathing. This seems a bit extreme for that, though. OTOH, I was focusing on something 10' away, so maybe. I'll get back to this tomorrow. If you are focusing at 10' there is no question but that you'll be seeing the effects of focus breathing. Almost all modern zoom lenses use an "Internal Focus" design, which has a fixed sensor to lens distance (older lenses moved the lens away from the sensor to focus closer), and focuses closer by moving elements internally in relation each other. That does allow better compensation for various aberrations at closer distances, but it also changes the focal length. Often it is a significant change. And the change might be very different for different lens designs. Some 70-200mm zooms are about 125mm when set to 200mm and focused at the closest focusing distance. Others are nearer to 160mm. The Nikkor 105mm f/2.8 macro lens is actually about 76mm when focused close enough to get 1:1 magnification. It would be very surprising in two brands with different maximum focal lengths were anywhere near the same! -- Floyd L. Davidson http://www.apaflo.com/ Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) |
#7
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
On Thu, 27 Aug 2015 20:59:42 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On 2015-08-28 02:23:30 +0000, Bill W said: I am going crazy with this. Two lenses, side by side. A Pentax DA L 70-300 lens, and Sigma 18-250 DC lens. The DA in Pentax means it's designed for APS-C sensors, and the same with the DC on the Sigma lens. Why do they have nothing close to the same field of view & magnification at the same focal length? To get the same photo with both lenses, I need to set the Pentax to 170mm, and the Sigma to 250mm. When I do that, and then look at the two identical photos in LR, the exif data shows the Pentax set at 170, with a 255mm 35mm equivalent, and the Sigma at 250, with a 375mm 35mm equivalent, which is correct, I guess, but the Pentax has much greater magnification at *equal* focal lengths. Can someone explain this to me? I am thinking of buying the Sigma 18-300 - also a DC lens, but it now appears that the Pentax would still have greater magnification (375mm equivalent). How can one compare the actual magnification of different lenses on paper? It's obvious in this case that one needs to multiply the Pentax focal length by 1.5, which is expected, but not the Sigma. How can I know that going forward, and looking at other lenses? Some clarification is need: What camera are you using? K5. To what purpose are you going to put these lenses. An occasional longer range lens, or wider range walk-around lens? Yes... Focal length is not magnification. A typical APS-C sensored camera is going to have a x1.5 35mm equivalence (x1.3 for Canons). Did you mean Sigma 18-250mm or Sigma 18-300mm? I have the 18-250, but I'm thinking about the 18-300. Both are general purpose "super zooms" and as such have to make some compromises. Both have a macro feature and have a corresponding macro magnification ratio 1:3 for both of them. There is a Pentax equivalent in their Pentax DA 18-270mm f/3.5-6.3 @ $447 from B&H. Pentax doesn't seem to have a 70-300mm, they have a 55-300mm. It is not a macro lens and thus has a max magnification of 0.28x. Yes, I meant 55-300. You can't compare the two brands for magnification based on total specs, one with a macro feature and one without. Personally unless I needed/wanted a macro feature I would go with the Pentax 55-300mm, the HD Pentax DA 55-300mm f/4-5.8 ED WA is also weather sealed. ...and for $290 from B&H it looks like bargain. The issue with the Pentax 55-300 lenses is slow, noisy, hunting AF. It is almost entirely useless at air shows, and even auto racing at times. And using it with video is hopeless because of all the noise. Even the Sigma walkaround stuff is much, much better with AF. The Pentax IQ is pretty good, though, especially since I think I got it as a kit lens. So, what lenses are you actually looking at, and what do you want to use them for, and what sort of budget constraints do you have? Well again, I was thinking of selling the 18-250, and getting the 18-300, but I'm not sure it's worth it. And I use long focal lengths almost invariably for distant subjects, so I'm rarely concerned with the macro capabilities. I really wanted to fill out my lenses with a 150-600 type lens, but no one makes newer ones for Pentax, except a Pentax full frame 150-450, and I don't really want to pay their prices ($2500). The most recent Sigma available is about 5 years old, and it's still $1600. I don't mind the price, but I always want the latest thing. There are usually improvements over time, but it looks like Sigma will not be putting a Pentax mount on their new 150-600. It's too bad - the lens gets very good reviews. |
#8
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
In article , Bill W
wrote: Well again, I was thinking of selling the 18-250, and getting the 18-300, but I'm not sure it's worth it. And I use long focal lengths almost invariably for distant subjects, so I'm rarely concerned with the macro capabilities. the difference is minor. crop instead. |
#9
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
On Fri, 28 Aug 2015 00:38:08 -0400, nospam
wrote: In article , Bill W wrote: Well again, I was thinking of selling the 18-250, and getting the 18-300, but I'm not sure it's worth it. And I use long focal lengths almost invariably for distant subjects, so I'm rarely concerned with the macro capabilities. the difference is minor. crop instead. Probably good advice. I can use the $600 for better purposes. |
#10
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Somebody PLEASE explaing this to me... - Focal Length
On 2015-08-28 04:35:14 +0000, Bill W said:
On Thu, 27 Aug 2015 20:59:42 -0700, Savageduck wrote: On 2015-08-28 02:23:30 +0000, Bill W said: I am going crazy with this. Two lenses, side by side. A Pentax DA L 70-300 lens, and Sigma 18-250 DC lens. The DA in Pentax means it's designed for APS-C sensors, and the same with the DC on the Sigma lens. Why do they have nothing close to the same field of view & magnification at the same focal length? To get the same photo with both lenses, I need to set the Pentax to 170mm, and the Sigma to 250mm. When I do that, and then look at the two identical photos in LR, the exif data shows the Pentax set at 170, with a 255mm 35mm equivalent, and the Sigma at 250, with a 375mm 35mm equivalent, which is correct, I guess, but the Pentax has much greater magnification at *equal* focal lengths. Can someone explain this to me? I am thinking of buying the Sigma 18-300 - also a DC lens, but it now appears that the Pentax would still have greater magnification (375mm equivalent). How can one compare the actual magnification of different lenses on paper? It's obvious in this case that one needs to multiply the Pentax focal length by 1.5, which is expected, but not the Sigma. How can I know that going forward, and looking at other lenses? Some clarification is need: What camera are you using? K5. To what purpose are you going to put these lenses. An occasional longer range lens, or wider range walk-around lens? Yes... Focal length is not magnification. A typical APS-C sensored camera is going to have a x1.5 35mm equivalence (x1.3 for Canons). Did you mean Sigma 18-250mm or Sigma 18-300mm? I have the 18-250, but I'm thinking about the 18-300. Both are general purpose "super zooms" and as such have to make some compromises. Both have a macro feature and have a corresponding macro magnification ratio 1:3 for both of them. There is a Pentax equivalent in their Pentax DA 18-270mm f/3.5-6.3 @ $447 from B&H. Pentax doesn't seem to have a 70-300mm, they have a 55-300mm. It is not a macro lens and thus has a max magnification of 0.28x. Yes, I meant 55-300. You can't compare the two brands for magnification based on total specs, one with a macro feature and one without. Personally unless I needed/wanted a macro feature I would go with the Pentax 55-300mm, the HD Pentax DA 55-300mm f/4-5.8 ED WA is also weather sealed. ...and for $290 from B&H it looks like bargain. The issue with the Pentax 55-300 lenses is slow, noisy, hunting AF. It is almost entirely useless at air shows, and even auto racing at times. And using it with video is hopeless because of all the noise. Even the Sigma walkaround stuff is much, much better with AF. The Pentax IQ is pretty good, though, especially since I think I got it as a kit lens. I am unfamiliar with the pentax lenses and current Sigmas. All I can say is the performance of my Nikkor 70-300mm VR has not dissapointed when paired with my D300S. So, what lenses are you actually looking at, and what do you want to use them for, and what sort of budget constraints do you have? Well again, I was thinking of selling the 18-250, and getting the 18-300, but I'm not sure it's worth it. And I use long focal lengths almost invariably for distant subjects, so I'm rarely concerned with the macro capabilities. I really wanted to fill out my lenses with a 150-600 type lens, but no one makes newer ones for Pentax, except a Pentax full frame 150-450, and I don't really want to pay their prices ($2500). The most recent Sigma available is about 5 years old, and it's still $1600. I don't mind the price, but I always want the latest thing. There are usually improvements over time, but it looks like Sigma will not be putting a Pentax mount on their new 150-600. It's too bad - the lens gets very good reviews. Perhaps it might be time to look at other systems. -- Regards, Savageduck |
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