I wish to compare two cameras on the basis of detail/micro-contrast. Normally, I wheel them up to a combined slant-edge/Siemens-star target - frame it about the same and compare edge response using an MTF program.
Less precisely, I could of course shoot a Real World Scene and eyeball the difference.
Lately I wonder if "equal framing" is valid when the MPs are greatly different.
A good example is the comparison between my Sigma SD14 and my SD1M. Different sensor sizes and different MP:
SD14 is 2640px wide and sensor is 20.7mm wide. SD1M is 4704px wide and sensor is 23.5mm wide.
I see two reasonable ways to normalize test images from these two cameras for comparison of detail/micro-contrast:
Shoot so as frame an object to be the same pixel size on the sensor by zooming with the lens or the feet. For my cameras and 1600px object size, the SD14 would frame the object at 61% of the width and the SD1M at 34%, ignoring viewfinder differences, if any.
Shoot from the same distance with the same lens focal length and re-sample either or both images to make the object the same pixel size.
Which of these two ways is more valid and why? (or vice-versa: less valid and why?).
I don't see equal framing as being valid for different crop cameras - what if I were comparing an m4/3 with a so-called full-frame?
Should it be though that "camera equivalence" is a factor, here is one of the better references for that:
http://www.falklumo.com/lumolabs/art...nce/index.html
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