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The same lens produces different results on cameras with different sized sensors. As a result, it can be tough to cross-shop Micro Four-Thirds, APS-C, Full Frame, and Medium Format cameras. nnCrop Factor is a conversion that makes it simple to determine the exact results you'll get with any given lens, regardless of your camera's sensor size. By multiplying your camera's crop factor by a lens' focal length AND aperture, you can determine the full frame equivalent angle of view, depth-of-field (background blur) and a good estimate of the low-light noise.nnHere are common crop factors:nn1X: Full-frame cameras like the Nikon D610, D750, D850, D5, Canon 6D, 5D, and 1D, Sony a7, a9, Pentax K1nn1.5X: APS-C cameras like the Nikon D7200, D5300, D3400, Sony a6500, and Fuji X-T3nn1.6X: Canon APS-C cameras like the Canon 7D, 80D, 77Dnn2X: Micro four-thirds (M43) cameras like the Panasonic GH5, G9, and Olympus E-M1, E-M5, and E-M10nnFor more information and to see the previous crop factor and equivalency videos, see sdp.io/crop.nnTo get an outside opinion, here are articles and videos by other people on the same topic:nnwww.dpreview.com/articles/2666934640/what-is-equivalence-and-why-should-i-carenhttps://petapixel.com/2017/03/29/dispelling-myths-around-depth-field-crop-factor/