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How Do You Calculate A Camera Lens Range?

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How Do You Calculate A Camera Lens Range?

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Many point-and-shoot cameras advertise their lenses in terms of the magnification factor. In other words, the manufacturers boast that their cameras have a “12x zoom,” but this phrase does not describe the camera in terms of its lens range. Magnification factor and lens range are related, and so a few mathematical calculations will allow you to convert the magnification factor to lens range. This will allow you to better compare cameras if they use different ways to advertise the lens’s capabilities, or to purchase an equivalent lens if you should decide to switch to an SLR (single lens reflex) camera. Look up the widest angle your camera is capable of in your camera’s manual. This number will be expressed as a focal length in mm. For instance, most consumer-level point-and-shoot cameras have a widest angle of 42 mm. Divide this focal length by 1.6 to convert your camera’s widest angle into its digital equivalent. Most digital sensors have a 1.6x crop factor, meaning the sensor capture

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