Ryan85 said:
I agree with you about the 24-70 2.8 on a crop sensor. You won't be able to get as shallow depth of field with a crop señor as with a ff. I think that's the point he's tying to make that you geting more like a f4 depth of field compared to a 2.8 on ff. But yes you still get the light of a 2.8 lens on a crop sensor
Depends on how you look at it. I'd argue that with the exception of the f-stop's effect on autofocus, you really
don't get the light of an f/2.8 lens on a crop sensor. I mean ostensibly yes, if you have two sensors with the same pixel size and you look at a pixel-sized crop, you would see the same amount of light, but that's not the way people use cameras in practice.
People typically use cameras by framing a shot, and then viewing it at screen size or printing it at a desired print size. So the only truly interesting metric is the amount of light that makes up
each square inch of output at a given size. Using that metric, because a crop sensor sees light from only about 39% of the lens, per square inch of output, a crop body gives you an image produced with only about 39% of the light that you'd get shooting the same shot with a full-frame body (ignoring any differences in light caused by moving closer to the subject, which if included, would make the crop body look even worse by comparison).
When it comes to the actual image projected on the sensor, there's no meaningful difference between using a crop body and using a teleconverter on a full-frame camera—just a little bit of IQ loss caused by the quality of the TC's glass, and maybe a tiny bit of light loss from the glass itself. And we say that using a 1.4X teleconverter makes a lens act like it is a stop slower. By that same standard, using a glorified 1.6X teleconverter (a crop body) makes a lens act like it is 1.35 stops slower. The only real exceptions to that rule are when either A. you'd be cropping the image on a full-frame to match the crop body (the reach-limited case) or B. you're talking about how the autofocus behaves. But in the more general case, you really don't get the benefits of an f/2.8 lens.