[QUOTE=Cathathome]Even though digital photography has grown out of its infancy stage, and most people I know own at least one digital camera, I still see a lot of reference to the zoom factor in cameras with a smaller (than full frame) sensor. Quite awhile back, I finally got my head around the notion that the "equivalent to 400mm" reach of my little point and shoot was not like having a 400mm lens on a very small camera, but was in fact, only a cropped view of what my camera could put into a frame, but which gave the appearance of an image taken with a lens zoomed to 400mm on a full frame. The question is - do I really get the zoom or just a cropped version that mimics the field of view of a zoom lens on a 35mm body?

My understanding of the crop factor tells me no, it's not more zoom, but just the perception of zoom.

I found this site which I thought explained the crop factor/multiplier effect quite well, but rarely see the artificial perception of added zoom adequately explained.

Thots?[/QUOT

Yes, the "crop factor" affects the FOV. It is the same effect as if you cropped a full frame image in Photoshop. However, the argument goes that since the cropping is being done with the sensor, that smaller piece has the advantage of using all the pixels, not just the ones left over after the crop. That is an advantage.

This "equivalent focal length" nonsense was started way back when digital first started. Most people were used to 35mm film and wanted some anchor to wrap their thoughts around. Those who used other formats, such as 6x7 or LF, rarely considered equivalent focal lengths for their cameras.