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Author Topic: Nikon D800E & Medium format lenses  (Read 2607 times)

Dave Gurtcheff

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Nikon D800E & Medium format lenses
« on: May 01, 2012, 07:14:25 pm »

Hi all:
i use a Sony A900 with Minolta/Sony/Zeiss lenses. I also have an NEX7 that I use an adpter and full frame A900 lenses. Because of the smaller sensor, and laarger image circle of the full frame lenses, ther is a "crop factor" of 1.5. Here is my question: I also use a  Pentax 645D, and have several beautiful long lenses, such as the manual focus 150, 200, 300, and 1.4x ( matched for the 300 only). These lenses all have aaperature rings, and there is an adapter ring to attach these lenses to Nikon FF. Since the 645 lenses weere designed for a medium format image circle, i would assume there is also a crop factor when used on 35mm FF? What would that crop factor be?I preordered a D800E, and purchased a 14-24 Nikkor, and 18mm Zeiss ZF.2, but nothing on the long end which I only seldom use, so the inconvenience of an adapter would not be too big a deal.
Thanks in advance
Dave in NJ
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BJL

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Re: Nikon D800E & Medium format lenses
« Reply #1 on: May 01, 2012, 09:05:41 pm »

Never mind the "crop factor" confusion and hype: those lenses work in 35mm exactly like any other lenses of the same focal lengths do. The 150mm still covers one third of the angular field of view of a 50mm "normal" lens, and so on.
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Ellis Vener

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Re: Nikon D800E & Medium format lenses
« Reply #2 on: May 01, 2012, 10:00:50 pm »

Consideration of "crop factor" only becomes an issue when you compare the angle of view recorded by a larger format to the angle of view recorded by a smaller format. A secondary issue. Because you'll really only be utilizing the center of the lens' projected image circle you may think notice that the image is more crisply rendered from center to corners.
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ErikKaffehr

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Re: Nikon D800E & Medium format lenses
« Reply #3 on: May 02, 2012, 02:07:08 am »

Hi,

A 150 mm lens is always a 150 lens. So there is absolutely no difference between an MF 150 lens and an APS-C 150 lens. They will give identical, crop, FOV, DoF or whatever abbreviation on a given sensor.

One difference is that an MF lens has a larger image circle, so if you used it with a shift adapter you could do a lot more shifting.

Another difference may be that a lens built for a small sensor with very small pixels may be better corrected than a lens that is optimized for a larger sensor with larger pixels or film. Your 645D has 5.93 micron pixel pitch (distance between centers of two adjoint pixels), and the Nikon has 4.7 microns. So you need a piece better lens on the Nikon to achieve the same level of microcontrast.

Best regards
Erik


Hi all:
i use a Sony A900 with Minolta/Sony/Zeiss lenses. I also have an NEX7 that I use an adpter and full frame A900 lenses. Because of the smaller sensor, and laarger image circle of the full frame lenses, ther is a "crop factor" of 1.5. Here is my question: I also use a  Pentax 645D, and have several beautiful long lenses, such as the manual focus 150, 200, 300, and 1.4x ( matched for the 300 only). These lenses all have aaperature rings, and there is an adapter ring to attach these lenses to Nikon FF. Since the 645 lenses weere designed for a medium format image circle, i would assume there is also a crop factor when used on 35mm FF? What would that crop factor be?I preordered a D800E, and purchased a 14-24 Nikkor, and 18mm Zeiss ZF.2, but nothing on the long end which I only seldom use, so the inconvenience of an adapter would not be too big a deal.
Thanks in advance
Dave in NJ
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Erik Kaffehr
 

Petrus

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Re: Nikon D800E & Medium format lenses
« Reply #4 on: May 02, 2012, 07:41:04 am »

Divide the Pentax 645D sensor diagonal with D800 sensor diagonal, and you end up the the "crop factor" between your 645D and D800. People just never think about it as 135 cameras are the norm, not 645, but certainly the same rule holds here also.

Like others said it really does not matter for most of us, as those MF lenses work just like 135 lenses on the D800, after all the lens has no way of knowing what kind of sensor is behind it. 300mm is 300m is 300mm...
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