I guess a few have thought about that, I know I did. You mention getting rid of your aps-c system entirely. That K1 has an extra enhanced k5-series hiding in it, and there's no reason to be shy about using it in the interim, or even long term if you have an aps-c lens or two that you just love. If it was me with a K1, I'd keep my APS-C lenses until I got around to buying suitable FF replacements then sell off anything redundant (this is assuming no APS-C body is kept as backup). A side-moral is that even the 5+ year old sensor from the k5 series is pretty darn good (and would look even better with some noise reduction), so having to crop your K-1 down to a k5 level of performance isn't going to make you cry. The moral, to me, is given a fixed output image size, the more you crop the more noise becomes objectionable (with the caveat that you might be able to do a bunch of cropping before you even notice any noise at all). Noise reduction in LR turned completely off. This is iso1600, 1/250s out of a k5iis (and not starting with the full sensor image in the first place). The crop at each jump is approximately 2x, compared to the 1.5x crop from FF to APS-C (so more extreme). Less downsampled? We need a vocabulary to be unified and widely adopted to describe these things.īy way of example, here's the same photo three times cropped more and more,with the dimensions of the crop listed below (in pixels:P), then downsampled to a common viewing size. There are just too many good lenses and cameras out there. Damn, LBA hit me hard) to compliment the K-1. I really debated keeping it, but I just got a Sony A7ii (which I bought for my A, M, and m42 lenses. I also have these two full frames that I'm considering dealing as well (They overlap too much with other lenses I have): They're just not seeing as much use as I hoped they would. Regards,I don't think I have anything too coveted, but they are lenses that have worked really well for me in the past. That said, what do you have that you are considering letting go? We all have an LBA that need to be satisfied! I will still need a nice compliment of lenses to keep this as a back up. I have the K-7 which is now relegated to the back-up camera since I have the K-1. I can also use this lens on both my K-7 and K-01.Īlso, the K-1 has the crop mode, which allows you to automatically make your camera an APS-C sensor camera with about the same resolution as a K-5.įinally there is the back-up option. It i a great lens and I can shoot down to about 15mm FL without vignetting. I have a few APS-C lenses that I love and would not give up, and I use them on m K-1. There were a couple of lenses on APS-C that i really missed a lot when I switched to full frame.such as the Sigma 8-16 and Pentax 16-85mm Yes you do lose resolution, but the crop mode takes care of the vignetting and honestly noise wont be much of a factor (if at all). Is there anything missing? Are there any other benefits out there for using asp-c on full frame cameras? Obviously, you always want the right tool for the job, but I really am debating getting rid of my aps-c system entirely (which I love, but don't use as much because of all the benefits the K1 gives over the K3) and sticking with full frame.Do you already have a K-1? If so, I would keep your APS-C lenses and test them out in Crop mode. The cons definitely seem to outweigh the pros and don't really seem to give any reason to ever use the aps-c lenses on full frame. Those seem to be the only things I could find. Vignetting Due To Not Covering the Full Sensor I've done some reading on the subject already and have found: I've got a few apsc lenses that I actually like (but don't necessarily need) and am wondering if there is any reason to keep them. Sony E Mount, Sony A Mount, legacy Minolta A mount, our spiritual cousins in the RX series. This is a Reddit's best source for talking about the Sony Alpha photography system. Proud to be the #1 Camera-Brand Subreddit!
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