The point was a jab, intended with humor, at those who suggest 'full frame equivalent focal length' is the only thing that changes with a smaller sensor. The post to which I was replying included, "But not for the same effective FL. So a wildlife shooter on APS-C can shoot his 800mm equivalent using a 500mm lens." It was a general comment, honestly somewhat tangential to the post to which I replied. I suggest you not take things personally unless they're clearly intended that way. You'll know when that's the case.So what, pray tell, was the point of neuro's post #38 in this thread, which explicitly mocked a discussion of the advantages of an APS-C camera in getting more reach from a lens by calling those who said that those "who still believe in fairies, wizards and the magic of the crop factor." and then included the following image:
View attachment 227196
with no disclosure that it was actually a comparison of an iPhone photo to a picture taken with an R3 with a 70-200mm f/2.8L until 63 posts later in post #101, and then only if you followed the link in post #101 to see it was that image.
I consider it perfectly appropriate to call that intentionally deceptive, which is why, in post #85 I was demanding that neuro tell us what gear was used to take those shots. If neuro had labeled that image as what it was in post #38, it could be claimed as disclosed with full caveats, but the opposite was the case.
So in your mind, stating facts such as DoF with APS-C is 1-1/3 stops deeper than with the same focal length on FF and images from an APS-C sensor have 1-1/3 stops more noise at the same ISO compared to a FF sensor is 'dumping on APS-C'.In this context, don't dump on APS-C because full frame has some advantages over it.
Then you must also think that stating facts like the higher pixel density of APS-C sensors enables putting more pixels on target and APS-C systems are often smaller, lighter and cheaper than FF systems is 'dumping on FF', right? No, I bet you think those are just pieces of good information because they support your choices.
The bottom line is that cameras are tools, and it's always best to use the right tool for the job. That's why I have and regularly use cameras ranging from an iPhone to full frame, with two sizes in between. It's why I have a large set of lenses to support different types of photography. I shot an outdoor event yesterday, casual and somewhere I could be close to the subjects, and would be taking mainly group shots...I used the PowerShot V1 with its 2x crop sensor and 16-50 equivalent lens. Today, I shot an indoor jazz concert where I would be relatively far from the stage and needed to take ensemble shots and close-ups of soloists...I used the R1 and two lenses covering 24mm to 300mm at f/2.8, and even with that wide aperture I was using ISOs ranging from 3200 to 40000.
I respectfully disagree with your first characteristic. It seems to me that @Philnick has an inferiority complex, at least as far as his camera choices. Basic facts about the smaller APS-C sensor clearly trigger him in some way. Maybe he's just jealous that others have bigger sensors than him.But you have that combination of a superiority complex, a (deliberate?) misconstruing of everything you read, and a brittle defensiveness that makes any discussion pointless.
See, @Philnick ^^that was intended for you to take personally.
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