The OP is obviously blind to the points you, I, and others have tried to make here. ![]() If they want to vlog (which I suspect is the purpose), then the RF 15-30 would be the way to go and it has a manual focus control ring, and switches for that and IS! See that HERE Given that even if there was, it would render an FoV of 24-72mm, thus the 24-240 will cover both this range and that of the 18-150 lenses in one unit. However, there is no RF-S15-46, only a 18-45. Considering there are FF lenses of 15-30mm, and 24-240 that will render those exact focal lengths and not cause the camera to go into crop mode, thus keeping the original sensor capacity, it beggars belief that anyone would want to consider this! I have the 24-240 and it's an excellent lens, and I have used it on my R5 with decent results.Īs people consider crop R-series bodies as an alternative to the M-series platform, they likely look at the two most popular lenses: the 15-45 and 18-150 lenses and are attracted to roughly the same range on the R-series bodies. The actual Field of View of these lenses, as they combine with the crop sensor, will render 28.8 - 72mm, and 28.8 -240mm respectively. GEAR: 5DII, 7DII (x2), 7D(x2) some other cameras, various lenses & accessoriesĪlan, agree with you - your latter point was one I also made and that alone, to me, precluded any idea of putting an APS-C lens on a FF body, especially given the availability of comparable FF lenses that will do the job and retain the sensor capacity.Īt this time, the only two APS-C lenses available are :ġ8-45, and the 18-150 - one of which at least the OP is considering attaching to their FF body. It would be a big waste of those full frame cameras' capabilities to use them with an APS-C crop lens. The low resolution R6 with only 20MP full frame will be reduced to less than 8MP when cropped to APS-C! For example, the highest resolution R5 will be reduced to 17MP in APS-C mode, compared to 45MP in full frame. It's possible to do so, but the camera will "self crop" to APS-C format, which hugely reduces camera resolution. User control of Image Stabilization also is in the menu of the crop sensor cameras, so will need to be there in the full frame cameras too, if these lenses are attached to the FF camera.īUT IT MAKES LITTLE SENSE to use the RF-S lenses on any of the full frame R-series cameras. Using those lenses in MF mode must also disable the control ring function in the camera. have a control ring that becomes a manual focus ring at the switch of a button. Note that at least two of the full frame capable RF lenses. The control ring function assignment will simply need to be disabled if these lenses are fitted to any of the full frame cameras. This is already there, since some of the full frame RF lenses also don't have an AF/MF switch. ![]() Using the RF-S lens on a full frame R-series camera will need to enable a means of AF/MF control in the camera's menu. The R10 and R7 crop sensor cameras, for which the RF-S lenses are designed, have the AF/MF switch on the body instead of the lens.
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