Hi all,
I was comparing an EF vs EF-S lens (I've got the EF-S and love it...my buddy is still deciding between...) (We've both got APS sensors.)
After a revelation that I have to do the 1.6 multiplication on both EF and EF-S lenses (right?
) I got to thinking:
Since the EF-S lens design is made for APS sensors and EF lens design is for FF sensors...the end result is the same-ish. A properly sized cone of light falling on the appropriately sized sensor. But what about the physical aperture size?
My assumptions:
The EF-S lens has an f2.8 hole diameter suited to an APS sensor, to get the 2.8 ratio.
-and-
The EF lens has an f2.8 hole diameter suited to a FF sensor, to get the 2.8 ratio.
-so-
Since the FF sensor is bigger than the APS sensor...the Ef lens has a physicaly bigger diameter hole, than the EF-S (even though they both say f2.8 )
-so-
The EF-S lens has a physically smaller hole, than the EF lens.
-and-
I'm pretty sure the front glass diameters are sized accordingly too.
Now, let's pretend that we 'can' put an EF-S lens on a FF body:
I say, the EF-S lens would not be f2.8 on the FF sensor, it's too small a hole. It would be more like f4, let's say.
However, we can (and do) put EF lenses on APS bodies.
Does this mean that an EF f2.8 lens is actualy faster, say f2 on an APS body? (I'm assuming the lens just get's told to go wide open, by the camera body) the EF f2.8 hole is bigger than the EF-S 2.8 hole, so there should be more brightness? available...even if the APS sensor only sees the center of the light cone.
-or-
Does the APS body automaticaly stop the aperture down to the APS-sized f2.8 diameter...wasting the extra available opening)?
-or-
Am I way off base and forgetting something about/not fully understanding the "APS only sees the central part of the lens cone" truth?
I'm sure the actual math would show this isn't a huge deal, but I'm just curious. If it was a big enough difference, it would sway my buddy towards the EF lenses. He shoots in 'dark-ish' hockey arenas and needs every micron of aperture diameter he can get.
Anyway, hope I made sense here. Thanks for the input!
Eric
p.s.
as a side note, depending on the reality/answer.
When I look at the EXIF specs on a photo (EF lens on an APS body), it says: 70mm @ f2.8....not that it matters....but is that true? or is it really 112mm @ F2.0? I'm pretty sure the EXIF is just recording what the lens says it's set to. Another one to ponder...