Hi everyone,
I have a bit of a tech question.
- What happens with the focal length of modern macro lenses (e.g. my Canon 100 mm f2.8) at 1:1 magnification?
(- and how does the lens do it?)
I read
https://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tu...cro-lenses.htm about the increase in effective f-stop and understand that.
However I am confused about what happens to the real focal lentgh. I am juggling with four options, that contradict each other:
- the link mentions that at 1:1 the effective focal length moves out to twice the focal lenggh of the camera (f = 200mm?).
- when I look through my 100 mm macro lens and decrease the focus from infinity to very close I see the FOV narrows, implying a longer focal length. Or is this effective focal length?
- however my canon 100 mm has subject distance of 300mm at 1:1. This gives a focal length of 75 mm.
- most Internet foca discussions state that focal distances of macro lens decrease at 1:1. Expensive 180mm macro lenses may even reduce to 120-130mm and 100mm lenses usually have 70mm at 1:1
So what to make of this? Anyone who knows how this works? Or that can give more background info?
Regards