vbuggy
Golden Member
- Nov 13, 2005
- 1,610
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Let's take astroidea's assertion and extrapolate it to reality.
I don't have the NEX or the SX30 with me at the moment, but I do have the Leica X1 and the HS20 to hand.
As I said, with an APS-C DSLR the maximum sort of focal length you'll get for the same size as these superzooms in a short zoom is around 135mm. So let's extrapolate the 135mm APS-C vs ~400mm superzoom compact comparison to a 35mm vs 105mm (i.e. 400/135 = ~3, so we'll do 105mm vs 35mm), with the Leica standing in for a DSLR.
I shot the headphone from 60" away in challenging light conditions - it's getting dark and there's a soft, relatively dim light behind me.
First, the unmolested JPEG crop of the earcup from from the Leica X1:
Now let's take a look at an unmolested crop of the Fuji shooting at the same 35mm focal length (Oh all right, it wasn't exactly at 35, but close enough).
So I think we've established the level of inferiority of a compact sensor against an APS-C sensor. But let's deploy that zoom, dial in 105mm and shoot/crop the same thing, resizing it to the same image size.
I don't think you even need to squint to see which is better.
Bottom line is that superzooms give you options and versatility in one box, at the expense of outright image quality. As I said if you shoot using the lens rather than the sensor, it definitely generates good-enough results.
I don't have the NEX or the SX30 with me at the moment, but I do have the Leica X1 and the HS20 to hand.
As I said, with an APS-C DSLR the maximum sort of focal length you'll get for the same size as these superzooms in a short zoom is around 135mm. So let's extrapolate the 135mm APS-C vs ~400mm superzoom compact comparison to a 35mm vs 105mm (i.e. 400/135 = ~3, so we'll do 105mm vs 35mm), with the Leica standing in for a DSLR.
I shot the headphone from 60" away in challenging light conditions - it's getting dark and there's a soft, relatively dim light behind me.
First, the unmolested JPEG crop of the earcup from from the Leica X1:
Now let's take a look at an unmolested crop of the Fuji shooting at the same 35mm focal length (Oh all right, it wasn't exactly at 35, but close enough).
So I think we've established the level of inferiority of a compact sensor against an APS-C sensor. But let's deploy that zoom, dial in 105mm and shoot/crop the same thing, resizing it to the same image size.
I don't think you even need to squint to see which is better.
Bottom line is that superzooms give you options and versatility in one box, at the expense of outright image quality. As I said if you shoot using the lens rather than the sensor, it definitely generates good-enough results.
