Other than Fuji, every major manufacturer of aps-c cameras has shifted their focus toward full frame. Canon’s most recent aps-c camera was their M50 Mark II in October 2020; Sony’s newest (late-2019) a6100 and a6600 have already been soft-discontinued; only Nikon has released something in the last year with the Zfc, which is broadly theWhat are the differences between APS-C and full-frame? The main difference between APS-C and full-frame is the physical size of the image sensor – full-frame sensors are larger than APS-C sensors – and other differences between the two types of cameras flow from that. Which sensor is better, full-frame or APS-C? Contrary to popular belief, full-frame sensors are not always better than APS-C sensors. Each sensor type has pros and cons. The right sensor depends on the type of photography you do. This table shows the choices you have of full-frame vs APS-C.
A nightscape image captured using a full-frame camera (Canon EOS Ra) and a star tracker. On the other hand, if you’re shooting deep-sky astrophotography through a telescope, a crop-sensor DSLR such as the Canon T7i is a smart choice. Not only are the APS-C-sized sensor DSLR cameras more affordable, but they’re also much lighter.
The main disadvantages of full-frame cameras vs APS-C are the cost, weight and size of the camera bodies. APS-C (aka ‘Crop’ sensor) The smaller size of the APS-C CMOS sensors means the camera body is also smaller than a full-frame option. It also results in lower cost while still delivering superb image and video quality. jVcA.