I have seen several threads here in these pages comparing cameras of different types and different focal length.
Many comparisons assume tacidly that zoom setting number and focal length are linearly related and use a formula which assumes linearity to compute the dialed in focal length. But this does not have to be the case at all. Is there an official statement from Dahua that the zoom number relates linearly to focal length?
What I have been looking for but could not find is a simple table for the 5442T-ZE:
Zoom setting number vs vertical field of view ANGLE. That is the one table which needs no (hidden) assumptions but only a reference distance for focus. If you have enough data points in it, you could use linear interpolation for nearby angles without making big blunders.
Given such a table for your varifocal, if you like to know what a specific fixed lens will be able to cover, you just look up the vertical field of view ANGLE of that fixed lens in the spec sheet. (If that is wrong in specs, you better look for 30 day return policy)
Then you look up the zoom number that belongs to this angle on your zoom camera. Set the cam to this number and you got the vertical field of view of the fixed focal cam.
As a side effect, you get to check how accurate the specs for your zoom camera really are OR how precise you work OR how much tolerance there is.
I am actually considering to do just that, once the weather gets better. I am kind of curious...
Many comparisons assume tacidly that zoom setting number and focal length are linearly related and use a formula which assumes linearity to compute the dialed in focal length. But this does not have to be the case at all. Is there an official statement from Dahua that the zoom number relates linearly to focal length?
What I have been looking for but could not find is a simple table for the 5442T-ZE:
Zoom setting number vs vertical field of view ANGLE. That is the one table which needs no (hidden) assumptions but only a reference distance for focus. If you have enough data points in it, you could use linear interpolation for nearby angles without making big blunders.
Given such a table for your varifocal, if you like to know what a specific fixed lens will be able to cover, you just look up the vertical field of view ANGLE of that fixed lens in the spec sheet. (If that is wrong in specs, you better look for 30 day return policy)
Then you look up the zoom number that belongs to this angle on your zoom camera. Set the cam to this number and you got the vertical field of view of the fixed focal cam.
As a side effect, you get to check how accurate the specs for your zoom camera really are OR how precise you work OR how much tolerance there is.
I am actually considering to do just that, once the weather gets better. I am kind of curious...