Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
There are two aspects to a lens design. One is the focal length, which does not vary at all, and the second is the image circle, which is diameter of the circle the lens projects.
As an example, if you were able to mount a 50mm lens for a medium format camera on your D7000 it would give you the same result as putting DX 50mm lens on your camera; it would work like a short telephoto lens. If you put it on a full-frame DSLR, it would perform like a normal lens and if you put it on medium format camera, you would get a wide-angle view. However this is a bit of an illusion; the sensor on Nikon is about 15.8 x 23.6 mm, so if you took a piece that size out of each of the images you captured on each of these three formats, they would all be identical.
Going the other way, i.e. mounting your DX lens on anything other your DX camera is not going to work particularly well, which is where the image circle comes in. One reason that full-frame and medium format camera lenses cost more is that they have to illuminate a larger area. For a DX camera, the image circle is around 28mm (the diagonal of the sensor), whereas the image circle for a full-frame sensor is around 43mm and a medium format camera (based on the 2-1/4” square format) is around 77mm.
If you mount your DX lens on anything larger than DX sensor, the centre portion of the image will be quite good for the first 28mm, but then you will get into a circle that has terrible resolution and finally everything will be black.
Hopefully this is clear, rather than confusing...