I was browsing J&R's site, and I came across an EF-S 10-22mm, allegedly for a Digital Elph or a 20D. Now, I've seen the Digital Rebel called a lot of bad things in my day, but NEVER a Digital Elph. 
http://www.jr.com …e.process?Product=4008477![]()
pcasciola POTN SHOPKEEPER 3,130 posts Joined Sep 2004 Location: Millstone Township, NJ More info | Nov 08, 2004 05:11 | #1 I was browsing J&R's site, and I came across an EF-S 10-22mm, allegedly for a Digital Elph or a 20D. Now, I've seen the Digital Rebel called a lot of bad things in my day, but NEVER a Digital Elph. Philip Casciola
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photographyByEvangelos Goldmember 1,167 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jan 2003 Location: Florida, USA More info | Nov 08, 2004 06:48 | #2 LOL
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cmM Goldmember 5,705 posts Joined Apr 2004 Location: Chicago / San Francisco More info | Nov 08, 2004 07:47 | #3 LMAO!!!!
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thomascanty Bold. Pink.Gone, but not forgotten. 38,071 posts Likes: 2 Joined Mar 2003 Location: Temporarily Retired More info | Nov 08, 2004 10:21 | #4 Hey, I have a Digital Elph (S330)! How do I make that lens work with it? My name is Lonnie, but I answer to Thomas too.
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booggerg Senior Member 460 posts Joined Aug 2004 Location: Chicago More info | Nov 08, 2004 10:30 | #5 Permanent banWow the crop factor still applies to EFS? 20D || EOS650 || 50 f/1.8 MKI || 17-40 f/4L || 70-200 f/4L || Sigma 35-135 f/3.5 || Yashica Electro 35 || Yashica Minister || Yashica Mat 124G || Hoga 120CFN || 420EX || Sekonic 306 || Panasonic DVX100 || Canon GL2
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Jon Cream of the Crop 69,628 posts Likes: 227 Joined Jun 2004 Location: Bethesda, MD USA More info | Nov 09, 2004 10:25 | #6 booggerg wrote: Wow the crop factor still applies to EFS? "Equivalent to a 16-35mm zoom" Yeah. Focal length is an absolute metric. a 10 m lens will always have a focal length of 10 mm. "Crop factor" really relates the sensor sizes of the respective cameras (linear 24 mm/15 mm = 1.6x). The angle of coverage of a 10 mm lens on a D30/D60/DR/10D/20D is, because of the smaller sensor, equivalent to the angle of coverage of a 16 mm. lens on a full-frame 35 mm SLR. Jon
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booggerg Senior Member 460 posts Joined Aug 2004 Location: Chicago More info | Nov 09, 2004 11:12 | #7 Permanent banI thought the EFS series lenses are made for 1.6x crop factor cams. So the 10mm ought really be a 10mm. 20D || EOS650 || 50 f/1.8 MKI || 17-40 f/4L || 70-200 f/4L || Sigma 35-135 f/3.5 || Yashica Electro 35 || Yashica Minister || Yashica Mat 124G || Hoga 120CFN || 420EX || Sekonic 306 || Panasonic DVX100 || Canon GL2
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Persian-Rice Goldmember 1,531 posts Likes: 14 Joined Apr 2004 Location: Behind a viewfinder. More info | Nov 09, 2004 11:28 | #8 Wouldnt a 20D be called the elph? they feel like a big P&S........
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Jon Cream of the Crop 69,628 posts Likes: 227 Joined Jun 2004 Location: Bethesda, MD USA More info | Nov 09, 2004 12:04 | #9 booggerg wrote: I thought the EFS series lenses are made for 1.6x crop factor cams. So the 10mm ought really be a 10mm. They're made for the 15 x 22.5 mm sensor of the "1.6x crop factor" cameras. They can't cover a full 24 x 36 mm frame/sensor. They still have a real focal length of 10 mm, unlike the PowerShot P/S line where they advertise a "35 mm equivalent" focal length. But they're no different in coverage than a full-frame 10 mm. lens would be on a DR/20D. A picture taken with the new 17-85 EF-S at 17 mm will look identical in coverage to one taken by a 17-40 EF L at 17 mm, or Drisley's new love, the 17 mm Tokina prime on a DR or 20D. It doesn't matter that the one is EF-S and the other two are EF (full frame). Jon
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booggerg Senior Member 460 posts Joined Aug 2004 Location: Chicago More info | Nov 09, 2004 14:26 | #10 Permanent banI do'nt understand, I thought these lenses are made for 1.6x sensors, so shouldn't they focus their image onto a smaller size? So you'd be getting the full 10mm field of view instead of a 16mm field of view. So setting the EFS 10-20mm to 17mm on a 20D, you'd get the identical field of view as a 17-40mm L set to 17mm on a 1DS. Correct? 20D || EOS650 || 50 f/1.8 MKI || 17-40 f/4L || 70-200 f/4L || Sigma 35-135 f/3.5 || Yashica Electro 35 || Yashica Minister || Yashica Mat 124G || Hoga 120CFN || 420EX || Sekonic 306 || Panasonic DVX100 || Canon GL2
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Jon Cream of the Crop 69,628 posts Likes: 227 Joined Jun 2004 Location: Bethesda, MD USA More info | Nov 10, 2004 08:52 | #11 No. Focal length is an absolute measure of the distance between the optical center (nodal point) of the lens and the point at which a light source at infinity will focus. So a 10 mm lens will focus the light from the sun 10 mm from the optical center of the lens. A 16 mm. lens will focus it at 16 mm. from the optical center of the lens. And a 100 mm lens will focus it at 100 mm from the optical center of the lens. It has no bearing on how large an area a lens is able to illuminate (cover). Jon
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