12/9/2023 0 Comments Using apsc lens on frame sonyIncreasing my aperture to f/9 meant higher ISO’s. This hurt a bit, since I was almost always in a struggle for light. But… and it is a big but- I needed to be at f/9. I also found that because it was more manageable that I didn’t even need to use a beanbag and that helped me with tracking my subjects. I handheld the set-up all day without any shoulder or wrist issues. I was able to get up and down in the safari vehicle with ease. The 200-600mm lens was much smaller and lighter and more manageable than a 600mm prime lens. When shooting with the Sony a9 and the 200-600mm lens for wildlife, I used the 1.4 teleconverter on safari with great success. So how do I apply all of this in the field: Another thing to consider when cropping, whether in post or in-camera is how many megapixels does your camera have? The Sony a9 has 24.2-megapixel where the Sony 7r3 has 42.4-megapixels and the Sony 7r4 has over 60!! You can make a heavily cropped image still look good for the web, but do you want to? That is an individual choice. If you are only using it for web viewing, than you have much more flexibility with cropping. If you are going to make a large print than you really should’’t count on cropping much. First, what are you going to do with the image. For example, if you add a 2x converter to a 300mm lens that focuses down to five feet, you get a 600mm lens that focuses down to five feet.Ĭropping in post-well that it self explanatory but many ask “How much can I crop without losing quality”. However, adding a teleconverter doesn’t change the lens’ minimum focusing distance. Adding a teleconverter will also reduce the light by 1 stop for a 1.4x converter and by 2 stops for a 2x. By using a teleconverter you will gain some reach but you may sacrifice some sharpness and autofocus (same is true with using the APS-C mode). When using this feature you are essentially cutting your megapixels in half.Ī teleconverter is a short tube that fits between the lens and camera body and increases the focal length of the lens. This feature offers a 1.5 x magnification. I have assigned mine to C3 so that I can access it very easily while shooting. The setting is in the menu and where it is located varies according to your camera model, but you will most likely find it in the first menu group. For shooting still images, the camera uses only part of the full-frame sensor, effectively shooting with a cropped sensor rather than a full-frame sensor. The APS-C/Super 35mm setting - aka “crop mode” on the camera effectively chooses which sensor size you want to use. I wish some icon would blink in this mode to warn u about this.Since I started using Sony, there have been load of folks asking me which is better, using the APS-C setting, a teleconverter or cropping in post? Here are some of my thoughts… Which is obvious at the wide end or tele end but hard to tell in between. And i find myself using it often, just have to remember to not leave it ON by accident. I have it mapped to the DOWN button on the wheel (since it wasnt mapped to anything out of the box), seems to work fine. +1 for pointing out that when you switch modes like this you are basically cropping in camera so yes you do lose MPixels (which you do no matter) but at least they made it much easier to do at the time of taking the pic on hardware :).Īlso yes i do love the customizability of this feature now. It helps composing, too (for which one can of course also use the PDAF area frame in the EVF - though not in MF mode). 42MP is great for cropping in post - which is what APS-C mode does. Can you show us an image of yours where 42MP was required, or even beneficial for final output? I have 2m x1,40m at home taken with 24MP and less. Just to state the obvious it also changes the 42M sensor into a 18M sensor
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