For sale: Canon 10-18mm with filters and hood

Hoodliving

Active member
Hey yall selling my 10-18mm its in perfect condition no scratches knicks drops or bumps. Comes with a .9 tiffen ND filter, and a tiffen UV filter as well as lens hood.

It sells online for 300 so to help out NS just looking to get 280 for everything.
 
13636016:ben_collins said:
of course it will

All Canon EF and EF-S lenses do

This is an EF-s lens that will fit the rebel ti series aps-c size sensor.

however not all lenses will fit that sensor without cropping.

Canons EF L series are desinged for full frame sensors so if you shoot with a canon 24-70mm L series lens on an aps-c senor like in the ti line there will be a 1.62x crop, making the lens a 38.88mm - 113.4mm

since this lens was designed to cover an aps-c sensor there will be no cropping but it will not cover a full frame sensor.
 
13636037:dan_swagner said:
This is an EF-s lens that will fit the rebel ti series aps-c size sensor.

however not all lenses will fit that sensor without cropping.

Canons EF L series are desinged for full frame sensors so if you shoot with a canon 24-70mm L series lens on an aps-c senor like in the ti line there will be a 1.62x crop, making the lens a 38.88mm - 113.4mm

since this lens was designed to cover an aps-c sensor there will be no cropping but it will not cover a full frame sensor.

Not quite true, even the primes that are aps-c only still have a 1.6crop factor. Its inevitable considering the sensor itself is what has the magnification difference, if it were lens dependent there wouldn't be a need for two types of sensors. Think of it this way if you can use a full frame lens on a crop sensor the crop sensor is only using a portion of the frame, thus the design of aps-c lens where all they did was make the frame smaller on the lens so there isn't excess overlap saving cost to make and weight size etc. The camera body itself is what determines a crop factor.
 
13636037:dan_swagner said:
since this lens was designed to cover an aps-c sensor there will be no cropping but it will not cover a full frame sensor.

This is wrong

13636310:mantoast said:
Not quite true, even the primes that are aps-c only still have a 1.6crop factor. Its inevitable considering the sensor itself is what has the magnification difference, if it were lens dependent there wouldn't be a need for two types of sensors. Think of it this way if you can use a full frame lens on a crop sensor the crop sensor is only using a portion of the frame, thus the design of aps-c lens where all they did was make the frame smaller on the lens so there isn't excess overlap saving cost to make and weight size etc. The camera body itself is what determines a crop factor.

This is right
 
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