privatebydesign said:
jrista said:
You are asking for a highly subjective comparison.......
The hand-holdability requirement is a purposeful handicap here...
We've debated this topic over and over. You have shared your comparison of the 1Ds III and 7D a few times, and every time you do, I see a sharpness and resolution edge to the 7D that you insist doesn't exist at all......
No, I am just asking for results from real world actual shooting, because we cannot ever achieve the results we see from test bench samples.
Again, no, the handholding is important as most people do handhold most of the time. It might be difficult, but it is very relevant.
I have never, ever said it doesn't exist, in my samples I have said it does exist in artificial test type scenarios, however in real worlkd shooting other factors like AF, handholding, non optimal iso, aperture, shutterspeed, contrast levels etc etc make a bigger difference than the small differences between test bench results.
That is considerably more nuanced than your
"you insist doesn't exist at all".
I'd disagree that most people handhold in situations where you would need the added reach. In those situations, I believe most people are going to be using a tripod. I mean, that's what were talking about, here. Reach-limited situations where smaller pixels are going to show their advantage. Use of a tripod is a great normalizer...I shoot the 7D and 5D III on a tripod, with the same lens, in the same light. Usually, my entire goal is to maximize the lighting on my subject, get the right angle on my subject to minimize DR, etc. So I disagree that it's impossible to fully realize the advantage the 7D, or any other crop camera with high pixel count, has in real life.
I'd also disagree that you always have to be at a "non-optimal ISO" when using a cropped camera. I shot my 7D at ISO 400 all the time, and ISO 400 and 800 were the two optimal ISO settings for birds and wildlife. The whole notion that crepuscular hours are the only valid hours to shoot wildlife and birds in is also patently false. I have been photographing both for years now...my best photos are from the hours before sunset or after sunrise, when light is excellent, good color, and from an angle to the side of my subjects.
Your narrowing the parameters that are acceptable for this comparison as far as they can possibly be narrowed. Sure, full frame cameras have advantages. That doesn't change the fact that in common photographing situations, be it birds or wildlife during well-lit hours, sports with a well-lit field, macro with flash, whatever, "optimal" ISO settings, good shutter speeds, etc. are all viable use cases.
Cropped sensor cameras have two advantages. First, and foremost, is cost. They tend to be FAR more cost effective...someone in here already mentioned that they are eminently more capable of buying a $2,500 crop kit than a $25,000 FF kit that would be necessary to maximize the potential of a FF camera and ensure it kicks the crap out of FF in every situation (even reach limited...and I speak from experience, I've SPENT the near $30,000 on my kit, and I really had to in order to get the kind of focal length I needed to make the 5D III really surpass the 7D for distant birds...now it does...but, ouch! That's a LOT of money!!)
The other advantage is reach. Cropped sensors, and I'd argue newer cropped sensors are MUCH better at this than the 7D is these days, given how old it is, do indeed have improved resolving power. The 70D and pretty much any Nikon APS-C released in the last couple of years will demonstrate the benefit of crop-sensor reach better than the 7D can.
In any other situation...filling the frame more in a FF than a crop, when AF system counts more (until maybe the 7D II hits...if it really has a 65pt all-cross type AF system, it might, for a while, have a better AF system...generally FF AF systems are better), when you need to use REALLY high ISO settings, etc. Full frame obviously wins. But that's not the situation were debating here. Were debating reach-limited situations, where a tripod is highly likely, and if you know what your doing, with the ability to use an optimal ISO for either camera....
We don't need to convolute this to the point of absurdity.
