Field of View

Now that you have some basic understanding of digital camera sensors, it is time to take a closer look at the practical considerations that are created by these differences in sensors. A very poorly understood concept is the lens multiplier with the smaller than 35mm sensor-size that is used in most digital SLR cameras. The best way to illustrate this is with actual photos taken by a range of digital SLR cameras from the same tripod location.

We shot the same view using the exact same tripod location on a range of current digital SLR cameras. Each camera used a lens with the same focal length of 50mm. Lighting was the same with a 100W high-right light source, camera aperture was f4.0 in all cases, and white balance was set to Tungsten. The purpose of this series is to illustrate what you can see with each camera with the same lens, so exposure data is somewhat irrelevant, but exposure conditions were kept as constant as possible for reference.

 
1X

The Canon EOS 5D is a full-frame SLR, which means the sensor is the same size as 35mm film. This point of view is the way an image at this distance would look on the Nikon D3, Canon 1Ds III, Canon 5D, and 35mm film cameras. The APS-H sensor used in a few Canon pro models is 1.3X and falls between full frame and 1.5X in its field of view.

 
1.5X

The 1.5X multiplier is typical of cameras based on the Sony and Samsung sensors. This includes the Sony A700/A350/A300/A200/A100, the Nikon D300/D200/D80/D60/D40x/D40, the Pentax K20D/K10D/K200D/K100D, and all Samsung digital SLRs.
 
 
1.6X

Canon introduced the small APS C sensor in the pioneering D30 and they have kept this size for consumer cameras since. This field of view is typical of the Canon 40D/XTi/XSi. The Foveon sensor Sigma SD14 has a 1.7X lens multiplier and falls between this small APS C Canon sensor and the 4/3 system.
 
  
2.0X
 
Since Olympus does not make any film or full-frame digital cameras, the concept of lens factor does not have much meaning. 4/3 lenses only fit 4/3 sensor cameras and they are not designed to do double duty on a 35mm film camera or full-frame digital. The lens multiplier is 2X however, based on the diagonal of the sensor. This means a 50mm lens has the field of view of a 100mm lens on a 35mm film camera or full-frame DSLR camera. Olympus, Panasonic, and Leica currently produce cameras and lenses for the 4/3 system.
 
The lens multipliers and fields of view are fairly rough estimates in digital SLR specifications. Sensor diagonals are not always exactly a 1.5x or 2x lens multiple and there will be small field of view variations in a class of multipliers. The Pentax K20D with Samsung sensor may be a little different in field of view from the Nikon D300 for instance, but they will be close to the same field of view.
Bayer vs. Foveon Lens Equivalence
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  • Johnmcl7 - Monday, April 21, 2008 - link

    On page 4:

    "The Foveon sensor falls between 4/4 and the Canon 1.6 in size and has a 1.7X lens multiplier."

    I assume this should read '4/3'

    Obvious question is what about Fuji? While I realise they re-use Nikon bodies and lenses, the discussion about Bater and Foveon makes no mention of Fuji's sensor. While it is more conventional than the Foveon, it's not just a bog standard bayer sensor and while Fuji are a minor player, so are Sigma.

    For those who are not familiar with Fuji's design, they use two photodiodes at every point one larger and one smaller with the two combined to produce a single pixel in the output image. The idea is that these pair of pixels can capture more extended dynamic range than a standard bayer sensor of the same size. The latest version of this sensor is in the Fuji S5 Pro however it's limited to just 6MP although I can't remember if they still produce 12MP files from this. The S5 itself is basically a Fuji version of the very good Nikon D200 body although Nikon have of course moved on with the very impressive D300.

    John
  • Wesley Fink - Monday, April 21, 2008 - link

    Yes, it should have read 4/3 and the reference is corrected. The Fuji S3 was one of my favorite Nikon bodies and the dynamic range was certainly impressive in the studio.

    We did not mean to slight Fuji, but as one Nikon-mount body with a sensor that hasn't been updated in several years (the S3 and S5 sensors are the same as I understand it) we decided not to include the Fuji since there have been no sensor updates in quite a while.
  • Johnmcl7 - Monday, April 21, 2008 - link

    "We did not mean to slight Fuji, but as one Nikon-mount body with a sensor that hasn't been updated in several years (the S3 and S5 sensors are the same as I understand it) we decided not to include the Fuji since there have been no sensor updates in quite a while. "

    I can't say I really agree there, given the article more focuses on concept in parts I think the S5 sensor is still relevent as it's something slightly different to the bayer sensor. The article refers to only Bayer and Foveon which implies there is nothing else, I think for completeness even if you don't go into any detail it's still worth mentioning Fuji are doing something else.

    Also the S3 and S5 sensor are not the same, while they have the same amount of pixels it appears there's been some slight improvements although clearly not much. To be far to Fuji though, the Foveon sensor hasn't really come on much either - it's gone up very slightly in resolution with some small other changes but that's it pretty much. If the Foveon sensor had been just mentioned in passing I could definitely understand leaving Fuji with a similar mention but generally Fuji and Sigma are considered in the same boat as doing something a bit different although arguably with the Nikon body and mount Fuji have had more success.

    John
  • melgross - Tuesday, April 22, 2008 - link

    I never saw an advantage to their designs. I can't see what purpose having a smaller photo site on the sensor would do. It just has more noise, and less dynamic range than the larger sensor. I've read their papers on the subject, and they don't seem to have made a good case for it. Somehow, I think they understand that now.
  • Johnmcl7 - Thursday, April 24, 2008 - link

    "I never saw an advantage to their designs. I can't see what purpose having a smaller photo site on the sensor would do. It just has more noise, and less dynamic range than the larger sensor. I've read their papers on the subject, and they don't seem to have made a good case for it. Somehow, I think they understand that now."

    Are you referring to Fuji? If so, your information is incorrect - the last measurement I saw put the S5's sensor at slightly more dynamic range than the 35mm sensor in the Nikon D3. Their real problem at the moment seems to be resolution as well as having the older D200 based body.

    John
  • strikeback03 - Tuesday, April 22, 2008 - link

    I think Sigma (and Foveon) would be better off if Sigma could license a major player's mount, like Kodak did with the SLR/n and SLR/c. There are plenty of people who would like to have the sensor for the situations where it excels, but have no interest in a whole Sigma SA mount setup.
  • pinto4402 - Monday, April 21, 2008 - link

    I've been reading Anandtech for over 8 years now. I was a bit skeptical about your doing articles on digital cameras; however, this article put my reservations to rest. Very nicely done.

    I see why it makes sense for Anandtech to write about digital cameras. The nexus between computer tech and camera tech are very obvious if you've been following the trends. I'm a professional portrait photographer. In the last few years, it has become virtually impossible to remain in business unless you have a firm grasp on the latest camera tech as well as computer tech. I spend as much time on my computer as I do behind the camera. The camera has become a computer accessory (or vice versa). Many old timers who are hanging on to film are slowly being forced out. I'm somewhat of an old timer myself because I learned about photography when it was cool to have a darkroom, but I embraced digital equipment early.

    Your graphs make it very easy to explain to people why their P&S (piece of s***) cameras are simply not adequate for serious portraiture. The MP count is marketing crap. As you demonstrated, it's the physical size of the sensor that matters.

    Looking forward to part II of the series. Also, do you have any solid info on the introduction of 5D Mk II?
  • bjacobson - Tuesday, April 22, 2008 - link

    "The MP count is marketing crap."

    Mostly. If you're willing to do some post processing yourself, the higher MP will enable you to decrease the IQ gap between the higher end DSLR and the ho-hum consumer camera. For this reason, since I wanted something compact and didn't really need a lot of optical zoom, I chose the Canon SD1100IS. 8MP, and while you begin to get noise at ISO400, more at ISO800, and tons at ISO1600, using a non-linear digital filter should correct most of that without blurring the image much (if at all).
  • strikeback03 - Wednesday, April 23, 2008 - link

    Problem is that the camera has already blurred away lots of your detail at ISO 400 and up.

    http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canonsd1100is/page...">http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/canonsd1100is/page...

    Too bad there is no option to reduce/turn off the in-camera NR, for those of us who own a better program for it already.
  • Wesley Fink - Monday, April 21, 2008 - link

    I wish I did have definitive info about the 5D Mark II launch, but the best info I have is this fall at Photokina. Rumors pop up every month that the new 5D will be here in a few weeks - and the last rumor was a definite April 22, which is tomorrow. Rumors are just that - rumors.

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