If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
I am trying to calculate the focal length of the lens in my digital camera.
I understand that a smaller number such as 18mm is wide angle and a larger number such as 200mm is a tele-foto lens. If I calculate the angle of view of the camera, can I calculate the focal length? If so, how - and do I use the horizontal angle or the vertical plane (assuming the camera is used in landscape). Is this calculation an absolute or does it differ for 35mm cameras and digital cameras? Thanks |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
18mm/200mm IS the focal length.
-- "Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. Most people are even incapable of forming such opinions." -- Albert Einstein "TS" wrote in message ... I am trying to calculate the focal length of the lens in my digital camera. I understand that a smaller number such as 18mm is wide angle and a larger number such as 200mm is a tele-foto lens. If I calculate the angle of view of the camera, can I calculate the focal length? If so, how - and do I use the horizontal angle or the vertical plane (assuming the camera is used in landscape). Is this calculation an absolute or does it differ for 35mm cameras and digital cameras? Thanks |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
18mm/200mm IS the focal length.
-- "Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. Most people are even incapable of forming such opinions." -- Albert Einstein "TS" wrote in message ... I am trying to calculate the focal length of the lens in my digital camera. I understand that a smaller number such as 18mm is wide angle and a larger number such as 200mm is a tele-foto lens. If I calculate the angle of view of the camera, can I calculate the focal length? If so, how - and do I use the horizontal angle or the vertical plane (assuming the camera is used in landscape). Is this calculation an absolute or does it differ for 35mm cameras and digital cameras? Thanks |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
Also, If i add a 0.5x adaptor, does this half the focal length, or does it
half the area (i.e. the square of the increase in focal length)? "TS" wrote in message ... I am trying to calculate the focal length of the lens in my digital camera. I understand that a smaller number such as 18mm is wide angle and a larger number such as 200mm is a tele-foto lens. If I calculate the angle of view of the camera, can I calculate the focal length? If so, how - and do I use the horizontal angle or the vertical plane (assuming the camera is used in landscape). Is this calculation an absolute or does it differ for 35mm cameras and digital cameras? Thanks |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
Matt: The focal length is not a ratio but a dimension in mm.
tspill: For conventional cameras: the distance to your object divided by the width of your object as you see it is equal to the distance to your film (sensor) inside the camera, which is the focal length, divided by the width of the film (which equals 36mm in 35mm film) or Focal Length = 36mm x (Distance to Object/Width of Object) This should hold also for digital cameras if you think in terms of your focal length like that for a 35 mm camera. If you think in temrs of medium size cameras you use 60 mm instead of 36 mm and think of focal length in terms of the focal length for a medium size camera. "Matt Ion" wrote in message news:vJ9Rc.38137$gE.29243@pd7tw3no... 18mm/200mm IS the focal length. -- "Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. Most people are even incapable of forming such opinions." -- Albert Einstein "TS" wrote in message ... I am trying to calculate the focal length of the lens in my digital camera. I understand that a smaller number such as 18mm is wide angle and a larger number such as 200mm is a tele-foto lens. If I calculate the angle of view of the camera, can I calculate the focal length? If so, how - and do I use the horizontal angle or the vertical plane (assuming the camera is used in landscape). Is this calculation an absolute or does it differ for 35mm cameras and digital cameras? Thanks |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
Matt: The focal length is not a ratio but a dimension in mm.
tspill: For conventional cameras: the distance to your object divided by the width of your object as you see it is equal to the distance to your film (sensor) inside the camera, which is the focal length, divided by the width of the film (which equals 36mm in 35mm film) or Focal Length = 36mm x (Distance to Object/Width of Object) This should hold also for digital cameras if you think in terms of your focal length like that for a 35 mm camera. If you think in temrs of medium size cameras you use 60 mm instead of 36 mm and think of focal length in terms of the focal length for a medium size camera. "Matt Ion" wrote in message news:vJ9Rc.38137$gE.29243@pd7tw3no... 18mm/200mm IS the focal length. -- "Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. Most people are even incapable of forming such opinions." -- Albert Einstein "TS" wrote in message ... I am trying to calculate the focal length of the lens in my digital camera. I understand that a smaller number such as 18mm is wide angle and a larger number such as 200mm is a tele-foto lens. If I calculate the angle of view of the camera, can I calculate the focal length? If so, how - and do I use the horizontal angle or the vertical plane (assuming the camera is used in landscape). Is this calculation an absolute or does it differ for 35mm cameras and digital cameras? Thanks |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
TS wrote:
I am trying to calculate the focal length of the lens in my digital camera. I understand that a smaller number such as 18mm is wide angle and a larger number such as 200mm is a tele-foto lens. If I calculate the angle of view of the camera, can I calculate the focal length? If so, how - and do I use the horizontal angle or the vertical plane (assuming the camera is used in landscape). I cannot determine from your post exactly what you want to do, but I am going to assume you want to determine what focal length you are using (or need to use) in a given situation. To do this, you will need three measurements, which are as follows: 1. The horizontal (or vertical) size of an object you're going to take a picture of. 2. The distance from that object to your camera when said object completely fills the image horizontally (or vertically if you used vertical in #1 above). 3. The horizontal (or vertical, if you used vertical in #1 above) size of the sensor in your camera. Items #1 and #2 must be measured using the same units (i.e. both of them are measured in feet, or both of them are measured in meters, or furlongs, or whatever you want, as long as the units are the same). Item #3 should be measured in millimeters. Most manuals for cameras list the sensor dimension in the specifications section. Take the distance from the object to your camera, divide it by the object's size (#2 / #1). Multiply the result by the size of the sensor, and you have a pretty good approximation of your current focal length. For wide angle lenses, the calculation is less accurate, but it should be good enough for most purposes. For example, suppose I want to find the focal length that lets me just fit a one foot ruler in the frame while standing ten feet away. #1 = 1 foot #2 = 10 feet The camera I'm using is a Canon 300D. Its sensor measures about 22.7 millimeters horizontally. #3 = 22.7 #2 / #1 = 10 feet / 1 foot = 10 That result multiplied by #3 gives us 10 * 22.7 = 227 millimeters. At ten feet, I would need a 227 millimeter focal length to fill the frame of my 300D with a ruler measuring one foot across. I would probably use a 200mm lens. Is this calculation an absolute or does it differ for 35mm cameras and digital cameras? As long as you completely fill the frame with the object you've measured, the calculation above should be independent of the type of film or size of sensor. Crop factor is irrelevant for the calculation above. BJJB |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
TS wrote:
I am trying to calculate the focal length of the lens in my digital camera. I understand that a smaller number such as 18mm is wide angle and a larger number such as 200mm is a tele-foto lens. If I calculate the angle of view of the camera, can I calculate the focal length? If so, how - and do I use the horizontal angle or the vertical plane (assuming the camera is used in landscape). I cannot determine from your post exactly what you want to do, but I am going to assume you want to determine what focal length you are using (or need to use) in a given situation. To do this, you will need three measurements, which are as follows: 1. The horizontal (or vertical) size of an object you're going to take a picture of. 2. The distance from that object to your camera when said object completely fills the image horizontally (or vertically if you used vertical in #1 above). 3. The horizontal (or vertical, if you used vertical in #1 above) size of the sensor in your camera. Items #1 and #2 must be measured using the same units (i.e. both of them are measured in feet, or both of them are measured in meters, or furlongs, or whatever you want, as long as the units are the same). Item #3 should be measured in millimeters. Most manuals for cameras list the sensor dimension in the specifications section. Take the distance from the object to your camera, divide it by the object's size (#2 / #1). Multiply the result by the size of the sensor, and you have a pretty good approximation of your current focal length. For wide angle lenses, the calculation is less accurate, but it should be good enough for most purposes. For example, suppose I want to find the focal length that lets me just fit a one foot ruler in the frame while standing ten feet away. #1 = 1 foot #2 = 10 feet The camera I'm using is a Canon 300D. Its sensor measures about 22.7 millimeters horizontally. #3 = 22.7 #2 / #1 = 10 feet / 1 foot = 10 That result multiplied by #3 gives us 10 * 22.7 = 227 millimeters. At ten feet, I would need a 227 millimeter focal length to fill the frame of my 300D with a ruler measuring one foot across. I would probably use a 200mm lens. Is this calculation an absolute or does it differ for 35mm cameras and digital cameras? As long as you completely fill the frame with the object you've measured, the calculation above should be independent of the type of film or size of sensor. Crop factor is irrelevant for the calculation above. BJJB |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
TS wrote:
Also, If i add a 0.5x adaptor, does this half the focal length, or does it half the area (i.e. the square of the increase in focal length)? As I understand it, a 0.5x adaptor (which is probably also known as a focal reducer) will cut your focal length in half, resulting in a linear field of view that is around twice as wide as before. If your field of view encompassed a region ten feet across when you are standing ten feet away, adding the 0.5x adaptor should give you a field of view measuring about twenty feet across when you are standing ten feet away. BJJB |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
calculation of focal length
I was giving these as examples. I need to calculate the focal length of
another digital camera/lens to allow me to enter the lens details into a stiching/360 panorama application. And I asumed that you cna do this from the angle of the image from the camera. "Matt Ion" wrote in message news:vJ9Rc.38137$gE.29243@pd7tw3no... 18mm/200mm IS the focal length. -- "Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. Most people are even incapable of forming such opinions." -- Albert Einstein "TS" wrote in message ... I am trying to calculate the focal length of the lens in my digital camera. I understand that a smaller number such as 18mm is wide angle and a larger number such as 200mm is a tele-foto lens. If I calculate the angle of view of the camera, can I calculate the focal length? If so, how - and do I use the horizontal angle or the vertical plane (assuming the camera is used in landscape). Is this calculation an absolute or does it differ for 35mm cameras and digital cameras? Thanks |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Formula for pre-focusing | Steve Yeatts | Large Format Photography Equipment | 9 | June 22nd 04 02:55 AM |
Apertures and focal length | Stephan Goldstein | Large Format Photography Equipment | 12 | February 29th 04 03:28 AM |
What did Ansel Adams mean when he said he used a _ inch lens? | Bill Mcdonald | Large Format Photography Equipment | 7 | January 16th 04 05:43 PM |
Telephoto Binocular Comparison | foto | Photographing Nature | 21 | December 26th 03 03:27 PM |