Hi all,
I am relatively new to DSLR. I understand the relationship of aperture, iso and shutter speed, but when comparing a couple of lenses I've run into something that doesn't quite add up.
First a bit of background. I have a 6d and my only lens so far is a 50L. I know that this is a "challenging" lens but I chose it deliberately because I thought it would be good to learn on before branching out into other lenses. I figured the 50mm length would force be to learn good composition, while the 1.2 aperture would allow me to get "artsy" with my dof. As a side benefit, I've come to quite enjoy the ability to shoot hand held in low light with this combo.
My buddy lent me his 70-200 2.8L to try out. My impressions are that it is good and sharp, but I was having to use much, much slower shutter speeds and/or higher isos than I expected, even with the benefit of IS.
I decided to do a scientific comparison, so I set up a tripod, a focusing target, and some lights. Of course comparing 1.2 to 2.8 is not fair, so I tested both lenses at 2.8, and at 4.0 (since 2.8 stopped down vs 2.8 wide open might still not be a fair comparison, given the influence of the aperture blades). The end result was nonetheless consistent, the 70-200 was metering a full 2/3 of a stop less light than the 50 at the same settings.
What gives? The 70-200 has a bigger front element. How can it transmit less light at the same aperture?
This also raises the question, if I'm shopping for lenses that will be good in low light, what qualities other than aperture do I need to consider?
I am relatively new to DSLR. I understand the relationship of aperture, iso and shutter speed, but when comparing a couple of lenses I've run into something that doesn't quite add up.
First a bit of background. I have a 6d and my only lens so far is a 50L. I know that this is a "challenging" lens but I chose it deliberately because I thought it would be good to learn on before branching out into other lenses. I figured the 50mm length would force be to learn good composition, while the 1.2 aperture would allow me to get "artsy" with my dof. As a side benefit, I've come to quite enjoy the ability to shoot hand held in low light with this combo.
My buddy lent me his 70-200 2.8L to try out. My impressions are that it is good and sharp, but I was having to use much, much slower shutter speeds and/or higher isos than I expected, even with the benefit of IS.
I decided to do a scientific comparison, so I set up a tripod, a focusing target, and some lights. Of course comparing 1.2 to 2.8 is not fair, so I tested both lenses at 2.8, and at 4.0 (since 2.8 stopped down vs 2.8 wide open might still not be a fair comparison, given the influence of the aperture blades). The end result was nonetheless consistent, the 70-200 was metering a full 2/3 of a stop less light than the 50 at the same settings.
What gives? The 70-200 has a bigger front element. How can it transmit less light at the same aperture?
This also raises the question, if I'm shopping for lenses that will be good in low light, what qualities other than aperture do I need to consider?