zoossh
Senior Member
DX wasnt design to solved FF problems. it was decided due to cos of manuafacturing of sensors and it is more profitable to produce smaller sensors as this results to lesser rejected sensor in production.
DX lens was design to get wide angle to the DX sensors so that DX cameras not handicapped by lack of wide angles.. 12-24 and 10.5 was design give DX wide angle. a 12-24 full frame at even f4 is definitely much bigger an ddifficult to design $$$ again
oh, i'm confused. let me clarify.
Do you mean that the DX sensors does help to solve the problem of FF sensors with fringing with non-high quality FF lens, but is not primarily designed for this purpose, but rather becos the smaller DX sensor (APS-C size) makes it cheaper to produce per sensor, and also cheaper as in less rejection rate?
As for "DX lens was design to get wide angle", does it mean that the newly designed wide angle lens for the smaller APS-C size sensors with longer resultant 35mm equivalents focal lengths, offer newer shorter focal length ultra-wide angle of 10-24mm range as compared to the traditional range of 17-35mm more suitable for the sensors without any multiplication factor? The shorter focal lengths is the primary aim of design. On top of that, but not related to that, the image circle of the lens is reduced in the newer designs to make it cheaper to make in terms of smaller less demanding glass, and by the way lighter and smaller to promote sales.
i know that shooting is more important (but as you know i'm more of a travel photographer), but i'm also curious of the underlying mechanism.
what i'm asking is the ratio of the image circle of the lens to the image circle of the sensor is the factor that affects the relevance of the less quality of the peripheral. hence if a smaller sensor adopted helps to get the sweet spot of a full image circle lens, what happens if the image circle of the lens gets smaller?