takesome1 said:
The camera shake issue is two fold.
Imagine holding a beam of light like a lazer on two squares, one square over twice the size of the other. Imagine your hand shaking so the light is moving up and down at the same amount on each square. The movement of the light on the smaller square will cover a larger percentage of its area than it will on a large square. Your hand shake is equal, but the area of the sensor on a crop is smaller and magnifying it. Most people don't get this, distance and FOV do not matter, they are not moving your hand is.
Second your pixels are smaller and if your vibration is over a pixel width your resolution advantage drops quick.
Neat little example. A single point of light pointing at the center of a square. Now, compound the number of squares a few million fold, and instead of one beam of light, you have trillions. All shaking concurrently and synchronously all over this array of a few million squares. Camera shake is camera shake. It's going to soften the image regardless. Light that should fall onto one square is going to fall on more than one square. Acutance is going to drop off precipitously at the first tiny bit of camera shake, and after that it's a diminishing effect.
I have to hold my 5D III as steady as I have to hold my 7D to get the most crisp, sharp shot. In the field, there isn't any difference...I don't think "I can handle X amount of shake with the 5D III" or "I can shake N times more than with my 7D"...I simply hold the lens steady, as steady as humanly possible period, and burst my shots to get a good number of frames so I can pick the sharpest one. There isn't any difference in tactic here, you use FF and APS-C the same way, birds, wildlife, or otherwise.
Do you want to maximize the potential of the system, or not? That's either yes, or no. If yes, then you do everything you can to extract the absolute best out of the system. There is no difference in effort to do that regardless of format...we can't compensate for the microscopic differences in pixels when were out in the field concentrating on a bird. You AFMA with both FF and APS-C. You use IS with both FF and APS-C.
There isn't any difference here. Either you maximize your camera system's potential, or not. You either hold the lens as steady as possible, or not. No one thinks about the size of a pixel or the relative differences in pixel sizes in the field...they simply think: "Keep it stable."
takesome1 said:
Camera shake is a small part of it, it can be increased by other factors. You loose some light with the crop. Add to this you have to shoot at lower ISO than FF because of noise. To compensate for this you may be shooting at slower shutter speeds.
Conversely, you have to shoot at a higher ISO and a narrower aperture with FF to get the same depth of field. I have been shooting at 1200mm f/8+ for most of the week, to fill the frame with small birds. That results in an incredibly thin DoF. Shooting at 1200mm f/8 roughly normalizes the 5D III FoV, normalizes the DoF, normalizes the amount of light at the sensor, normalizes the amount of noise with an APS-C. If were talking equivalence here, let's truly be equivalent. For all my efforts at 1200mm on FF, I still get even sharper results with a 7D and a 500/4 (which should be expected...at f/8+ I'm getting diffraction limited...at f/4, the 7D is at a perfectly ideal aperture for maximum sharpness).
APS-C has an advantage when it comes to DoF and getting pixels on subject. Yes, it's when your reach limited...but that is most often the case when your not a pro with tens of thousands of dollars worth of gear, or the ability to spend every day of the weak learning how to get extremely close to your subjects.