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Question on digital zoom.
I'm looking at a few different digital cameras.. I've essentially
narrowed it down to: Kodak DX6340 3.1MP 14x Total Zoom & Camera Dock $299 Kodak CX6330 3.1MP 10x Total Zoom with Camera Dock $249 Kodak DX4530 5.0MP 10X Total Zoom & Camera Dock $339 Kodak DX6440 4.0MP 15x Total Zoom & Camera Dock $369 The decision now will be between zoom and megapixel as well as rating. My question is how do I convert the 10x zoom to a 35 mm equivilent? Let's start with say the 4530: 3X optical zoom 38 - 114 mm (35mm equivalent) so is 10x 7+3 or 10+3? Is it then a simple multiplication? 114 * 10 = 1140 or 114 * 7 = 798? None of the above? Any opinions on any of the above, i.e. "stay away from .." or "this one is THE BOMB!" The final determination will probably be would I rather have 5 MP's v.s. 4 or 15x zoom v.s. 10x. I have a 2.5x now, and I NEVER shoot at full uncompressed, so I may go with a 3.1 .. I couldn't ever forsee needing 5 megapixels.. but... Evan To e-mail me, remove theobvious from my e-mail address. |
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Question on digital zoom.
When you read "digital zoom" think of merely cropping out the edges of
your image then interpolating the remaining pixels to fill out the frame. This is the same process a good photo editing program is able to do only with digital zoom it is done in camera instead of at your workstation. My advice is to ignore any digital zoom feature and look instead at the optical zoom specifications. Put your money in the lens and sensor size not in the parlor tricks. Always capture at max resolution and do your magic with Photoshop. Don't have Photoshop? In many digital camera's you can crop after the fact with the advantage of selecting the approximate area of interest. Of course if you are shooting stuff for sale on eBay or something, that is different. Save yourself the extra step of resizing your image and shoot what you need. Note that the "X" does not refer to the total magnification only the ratio. If you have a 3x optical and a 7x digital you have change of 21X from wide to tele. The associative law of multiplication states that you can factor the optical and the digital any any order you want. If your optical takes you to a 114mm 35mm equivalent then 7 X 114 is a 798mm equivalent for a 35mm. But if you think that by so doing you will achieve the same results as using a real telephoto, you are being fooled. A while back a poster made a good case that the zoom lens of these digital viewfinder cameras was unable to resolve images beyond about 2Mp anyway. In other words the lines per mm the lens is able to resolve is less than the space between the pixels on the sensor. I did his math and his figures seemed right. You can buy a 5Mp sensor but all you are doing with it is sensing the same image only using up more pixels needlessly. Point is if you want a lot of Mp then get a camera with a larger sensor. Evan Platt wrote: My question is how do I convert the 10x zoom to a 35 mm equivilent? Let's start with say the 4530: 3X optical zoom 38 - 114 mm (35mm equivalent) so is 10x 7+3 or 10+3? Is it then a simple multiplication? 114 * 10 = 1140 or 114 * 7 = 798? None of the above? Any opinions on any of the above, i.e. "stay away from .." or "this one is THE BOMB!" The final determination will probably be would I rather have 5 MP's v.s. 4 or 15x zoom v.s. 10x. |
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