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	<title>Comments on: Why Can&#8217;t Digital Be Normal?</title>
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	<link>http://silverbased.org/digital-normal/</link>
	<description>Projects and ponderings for film photographers</description>
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		<title>By: Vox</title>
		<link>http://silverbased.org/digital-normal/comment-page-1/#comment-817</link>
		<dc:creator>Vox</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Oct 2008 17:11:13 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>In an email, RobW asked,

&quot;Your article answered some of my questions, but I&#039;m still
not sure why the sensor cannot be the same distance from
the flange (by which I assume you mean lens mount?) as on a
35mm camera? 

Is it a design choice that everyone has gone for, or a
necessity? &quot;

A basic problem with digital cameras is the cost of the sensor chip gets MUCH higher as the area increases. It&#039;s not just a linear factor that a chip of 4x the size costs 4x as much--it&#039;s actually worse than that. There are a certain number of unavoidable defects scattered randomly across a silicon wafer; and if you are only getting 6 chips out of the wafer rather than 60, the odds of any particular one being spoiled and unusable shoot way up. So that&#039;s where the economic pressure comes from for cameramakers to use the smallest sensor they can get away with.

The rule of thumb is that a normal lens is one whose focal length roughly equals the diagonal of the image format; so the smaller the image sensor, the shorter the focal length needed to yield the &quot;normal&quot; angle of view.

Canon, Nikon, and Minolta wanted to keep their lens mounts compatible with their earlier film cameras; but even Olympus who were starting with a blank slate with the Four-Thirds system kept a longer flange-to-sensor distance than the &quot;normal&quot; lens focal length for the format. One reason is that the early generations of digital sensors didn&#039;t  perform very well when light struck them at oblique angles. So it was preferable to hold the rear element of the lens a bit further away from the sensor, so light would reach it at more of a perpendicular angle. 

Otherwise it ought to have been possible for the camera to be extremely compact--as Olympus themselves proved with their &quot;Pen&quot; series of SLRs which shot a half-frame 35mm format.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In an email, RobW asked,</p>
<p>&#8220;Your article answered some of my questions, but I&#8217;m still<br />
not sure why the sensor cannot be the same distance from<br />
the flange (by which I assume you mean lens mount?) as on a<br />
35mm camera? </p>
<p>Is it a design choice that everyone has gone for, or a<br />
necessity? &#8221;</p>
<p>A basic problem with digital cameras is the cost of the sensor chip gets MUCH higher as the area increases. It&#8217;s not just a linear factor that a chip of 4x the size costs 4x as much&#8211;it&#8217;s actually worse than that. There are a certain number of unavoidable defects scattered randomly across a silicon wafer; and if you are only getting 6 chips out of the wafer rather than 60, the odds of any particular one being spoiled and unusable shoot way up. So that&#8217;s where the economic pressure comes from for cameramakers to use the smallest sensor they can get away with.</p>
<p>The rule of thumb is that a normal lens is one whose focal length roughly equals the diagonal of the image format; so the smaller the image sensor, the shorter the focal length needed to yield the &#8220;normal&#8221; angle of view.</p>
<p>Canon, Nikon, and Minolta wanted to keep their lens mounts compatible with their earlier film cameras; but even Olympus who were starting with a blank slate with the Four-Thirds system kept a longer flange-to-sensor distance than the &#8220;normal&#8221; lens focal length for the format. One reason is that the early generations of digital sensors didn&#8217;t  perform very well when light struck them at oblique angles. So it was preferable to hold the rear element of the lens a bit further away from the sensor, so light would reach it at more of a perpendicular angle. </p>
<p>Otherwise it ought to have been possible for the camera to be extremely compact&#8211;as Olympus themselves proved with their &#8220;Pen&#8221; series of SLRs which shot a half-frame 35mm format.</p>
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