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Thread: To use teleconverter or just crop during post processing?

  1. #1

    To use teleconverter or just crop during post processing?



    Hi guys.. I have a 135mm lens. Is there any difference in terms of image quality of images taken with teleconverter or crops shots from 135mm? thanks

  2. #2
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    Re: To use teleconverter or just crop during post processing?



    Go read this: http://www.lensrentals.com/news/2009.01.06/teleconverters-101


    Or, if that's too much to read, here's the bottom line: "The end result of all this is that the best teleconverters are ‘tuned’
    optically to work best with supertelephoto prime lenses. They are OK
    with telephoto lenses, and not very good with standard range lenses." Your 50-135 Tokina would fall into the standard range zoom lens category, and I bet since it's a DX format lens it won't work with any TC (the back of the lens sticks into the camera so far that there wouldn't be comparable room inside a TC).
    We're a Canon/Profoto family: five cameras, sixteen lenses, fifteen Profoto lights, too many modifiers.

  3. #3

    Re: To use teleconverter or just crop during post processing?



    hi peety3.. Sorry I haven't read my last post.. Oh I see, thanks for the link. It's sad that most images taken are less sharp using converters. Better yet I'll stick with the range of my lens. Thanks so much again

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    Re: To use teleconverter or just crop during post processing?



    Quote Originally Posted by peety3


    Go read this: http://www.lensrentals.com/news/2009.01.06/teleconverters-101


    Or, if that's too much to read, here's the bottom line: "The end result of all this is that the best teleconverters are ‘tuned’
    optically to work best with supertelephoto prime lenses. They are OK
    with telephoto lenses, and not very good with standard range lenses."


    What does "tuned" mean? They don't correct for aberrations of specific lenses, do they? Aren't they just diverging lenses?


    I believe that teleconverters work best with supertelephoto lenses, but I doubt it is because they're somehow specificlly designed to work with long focal lengths or with specific lens designs (though if I'm wrong and someone would be kind enough to educate me, I would appreciate it)


    Also, even if true, the statement does not answer the question "which is better, to use a teleconverter or crop?"


    In my mind:


    Crop advantages:


    1) No additional glass to degrade image (TC's probably add CA and other abberations, but I dunno how much. Probably not much.)


    2) autofocus doesn't get super slow


    3) More flexible... you can "extend" not just to 1.4x or 2x but by whatever factor you want. Or, if after the fact you decide you want a wider picture than you thought you would, you can just not crop it (or not crop it as much)


    Teleconverter advantages:


    1) You don't throw away pixels


    2) Less read noise because you're shooting at a higher ISO









  5. #5
    Senior Member neuroanatomist's Avatar
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    Re: To use teleconverter or just crop during post processing?



    Quote Originally Posted by Jon Ruyle
    2) Less read noise because you're shooting at a higher ISO

    SO, a higher ISO means less noise? Can you elaborate? I had thought that both read noise (shadow noise) and shot noise (highlight noise) increase with increasing ISO.

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    Re: To use teleconverter or just crop during post processing?



    Quote Originally Posted by neuroanatomist
    SO, a higher ISO means less noise? Can you elaborate? I had thought that both read noise (shadow noise) and shot noise (highlight noise) increase with increasing ISO.

    It depends on how you look at it. If you are in, say, Av mode and you take two pictures in the same light, one at low iso and one at high iso, the high iso one will look noisier. But that's because the camera adjusts the shutter speed to let in less light at the higher iso. That is, the signal noise ratio is lower (ie, the picture looks noisier) at high ISO because the signal decreased, not because noise increased.


    If, on the other hand, you take two pictures with the *same light*, that is, same lighting, same shutter speed, same f number, but with different ISO (eg, you set the camera to manual mode, take one picture, raise the iso, then take another picture), then the photon noise will be exactly the same for the two pictures. As you know, photon noise results from the fact that photons arrive on the sensor with a Poisson distribution. Expected standard deviation thus increases like the square root of the signal, so snr goes like 1 over the square root of the signal... ISO does not show up in the equation


    Read noise- or shadow noise as you call it- is different. At higher ISO, read noise tends to be lower. I don't know anything at all about how cameras work, but I'm guessing this is due to the constant effect of electronics operating after the amplification of the signal done at high ISO... if you amplify then add noise, you have less noise than if you add noise then amplify.


    The relevant comparison in the choice between cropping and using an
    extender is the latter one. Whether you crop or use an extender, the same amount of light will strike your picture, so long as the aperture is the same. Thus using an extender actually lets you use a higher ISO with the same amount of photon noise, and so the total noise is actually less with the extender in some cases.


    A while back, someone on this forum (probably Daniel) stated that this was a major factor for him in choosing extenders over cropping.






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