Canon EOS 5D Mark III vs. Nokia 808 PureView

Comparison

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EOS 5D Mark III image
vs
808 PureView image
Canon EOS 5D Mark III Nokia 808 PureView
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Megapixels
22.30
41.48
Max. image resolution
5760 x 3840
7152 x 5368

Sensor

Sensor type
CMOS
CMOS
Sensor size
36 x 24 mm
10.82 x 7.52 mm
Sensor resolution
5784 x 3856
7728 x 5367
Diagonal
43.27 mm
13.18 mm
Sensor size comparison
Sensor size is generally a good indicator of the quality of the camera. Sensors can vary greatly in size. As a general rule, the bigger the sensor, the better the image quality.

Bigger sensors are more effective because they have more surface area to capture light. An important factor when comparing digital cameras is also camera generation. Generally, newer sensors will outperform the older.

Learn more about sensor sizes »

Actual sensor size

Note: Actual size is set to screen → change »
vs
10.62 : 1
(ratio)
Canon EOS 5D Mark III Nokia 808 PureView
Surface area:
864.00 mm² vs 81.37 mm²
Difference: 782.63 mm² (962%)
5D Mark III sensor is approx. 10.62x bigger than 808 PureView sensor.
Pixel pitch
6.22 µm
1.4 µm
Pixel pitch tells you the distance from the center of one pixel (photosite) to the center of the next. It tells you how close the pixels are to each other.

The bigger the pixel pitch, the further apart they are and the bigger each pixel is. Bigger pixels tend to have better signal to noise ratio and greater dynamic range.
Difference: 4.82 µm (344%)
Pixel pitch of 5D Mark III is approx. 344% higher than pixel pitch of 808 PureView.
Pixel area
38.69 µm²
1.96 µm²
Pixel or photosite area affects how much light per pixel can be gathered. The larger it is the more light can be collected by a single pixel.

Larger pixels have the potential to collect more photons, resulting in greater dynamic range, while smaller pixels provide higher resolutions (more detail) for a given sensor size.
Relative pixel sizes:
vs
Pixel area difference: 36.73 µm² (1874%)
A pixel on Canon 5D Mark III sensor is approx. 1874% bigger than a pixel on Nokia 808 PureView.
Pixel density
2.58 MP/cm²
51.01 MP/cm²
Pixel density tells you how many million pixels fit or would fit in one square cm of the sensor.

Higher pixel density means smaller pixels and lower pixel density means larger pixels.
Difference: 48.43 µm (1877%)
Nokia 808 PureView has approx. 1877% higher pixel density than Canon 5D Mark III.
To learn about the accuracy of these numbers, click here.



Specs

Canon 5D Mark III
Nokia 808 PureView
Crop factor
1
3.28
Total megapixels
23.38
41.48
Effective megapixels
22.30
Optical zoom
Digital zoom
No
Yes
ISO sensitivity
Auto, 100 - 25600 in 1/3 stops, plus 50, 51200, 102400 as option
50 - 1600
RAW
Manual focus
Normal focus range
Macro focus range
15 cm
Focal length (35mm equiv.)
28 mm
Aperture priority
Yes
Max. aperture
f2.4
Max. aperture (35mm equiv.)
n/a
f7.9
Metering
Multi, Center-weighted, Spot, Partial
Exposure compensation
±5 EV (in 1/3 EV, 1/2 EV steps)
Shutter priority
Yes
Min. shutter speed
30 sec
Max. shutter speed
1/8000 sec
Built-in flash
External flash
Viewfinder
Optical (pentaprism)
White balance presets
6
4
Screen size
3.2"
4"
Screen resolution
1,040,000 dots
640 x 360 dots
Video capture
Max. video resolution
1920x1080 (30p/25p/24p)
Storage types
Compact Flash Type I (UDMA compatible), SD/SDHC/SDXC
16 GB on-board memory
USB
USB 2.0 (480 Mbit/sec)
USB 2.0 (480 Mbit/sec)
HDMI
Wireless
GPS
Battery
Lithium-Ion LP-E6 rechargeable battery
Li-Ion 1400 mAh (BV-4D)
Weight
950 g
169 g
Dimensions
152 x 116 x 76 mm
123.9 x 60.2 x 13.9 mm
Year
2012
2012




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Diagonal

Diagonal is calculated by the use of Pythagorean theorem:
Diagonal =  w² + h²
where w = sensor width and h = sensor height

Canon 5D Mark III diagonal

w = 36.00 mm
h = 24.00 mm
Diagonal =  36.00² + 24.00²   = 43.27 mm

Nokia 808 PureView diagonal

w = 10.82 mm
h = 7.52 mm
Diagonal =  10.82² + 7.52²   = 13.18 mm


Surface area

Surface area is calculated by multiplying the width and the height of a sensor.

5D Mark III sensor area

Width = 36.00 mm
Height = 24.00 mm

Surface area = 36.00 × 24.00 = 864.00 mm²

808 PureView sensor area

Width = 10.82 mm
Height = 7.52 mm

Surface area = 10.82 × 7.52 = 81.37 mm²


Pixel pitch

Pixel pitch is the distance from the center of one pixel to the center of the next measured in micrometers (µm). It can be calculated with the following formula:
Pixel pitch =   sensor width in mm  × 1000
sensor resolution width in pixels

5D Mark III pixel pitch

Sensor width = 36.00 mm
Sensor resolution width = 5784 pixels
Pixel pitch =   36.00  × 1000  = 6.22 µm
5784

808 PureView pixel pitch

Sensor width = 10.82 mm
Sensor resolution width = 7728 pixels
Pixel pitch =   10.82  × 1000  = 1.4 µm
7728


Pixel area

The area of one pixel can be calculated by simply squaring the pixel pitch:
Pixel area = pixel pitch²

You could also divide sensor surface area with effective megapixels:
Pixel area =   sensor surface area in mm²
effective megapixels

5D Mark III pixel area

Pixel pitch = 6.22 µm

Pixel area = 6.22² = 38.69 µm²

808 PureView pixel area

Pixel pitch = 1.4 µm

Pixel area = 1.4² = 1.96 µm²


Pixel density

Pixel density can be calculated with the following formula:
Pixel density =  ( sensor resolution width in pixels )² / 1000000
sensor width in cm

One could also use this formula:
Pixel density =   effective megapixels × 1000000  / 10000
sensor surface area in mm²

5D Mark III pixel density

Sensor resolution width = 5784 pixels
Sensor width = 3.6 cm

Pixel density = (5784 / 3.6)² / 1000000 = 2.58 MP/cm²

808 PureView pixel density

Sensor resolution width = 7728 pixels
Sensor width = 1.082 cm

Pixel density = (7728 / 1.082)² / 1000000 = 51.01 MP/cm²


Sensor resolution

Sensor resolution is calculated from sensor size and effective megapixels. It's slightly higher than maximum (not interpolated) image resolution which is usually stated on camera specifications. Sensor resolution is used in pixel pitch, pixel area, and pixel density formula. For sake of simplicity, we're going to calculate it in 3 stages.

1. First we need to find the ratio between horizontal and vertical length by dividing the former with the latter (aspect ratio). It's usually 1.33 (4:3) or 1.5 (3:2), but not always.

2. With the ratio (r) known we can calculate the X from the formula below, where X is a vertical number of pixels:
(X × r) × X = effective megapixels × 1000000    →   
X =  effective megapixels × 1000000
r
3. To get sensor resolution we then multiply X with the corresponding ratio:

Resolution horizontal: X × r
Resolution vertical: X

5D Mark III sensor resolution

Sensor width = 36.00 mm
Sensor height = 24.00 mm
Effective megapixels = 22.30
r = 36.00/24.00 = 1.5
X =  22.30 × 1000000  = 3856
1.5
Resolution horizontal: X × r = 3856 × 1.5 = 5784
Resolution vertical: X = 3856

Sensor resolution = 5784 x 3856

808 PureView sensor resolution

Sensor width = 10.82 mm
Sensor height = 7.52 mm
Effective megapixels = 41.48
r = 10.82/7.52 = 1.44
X =  41.48 × 1000000  = 5367
1.44
Resolution horizontal: X × r = 5367 × 1.44 = 7728
Resolution vertical: X = 5367

Sensor resolution = 7728 x 5367


Crop factor

Crop factor or focal length multiplier is calculated by dividing the diagonal of 35 mm film (43.27 mm) with the diagonal of the sensor.
Crop factor =   43.27 mm
sensor diagonal in mm


5D Mark III crop factor

Sensor diagonal in mm = 43.27 mm
Crop factor =   43.27  = 1
43.27

808 PureView crop factor

Sensor diagonal in mm = 13.18 mm
Crop factor =   43.27  = 3.28
13.18

35 mm equivalent aperture

Equivalent aperture (in 135 film terms) is calculated by multiplying lens aperture with crop factor (a.k.a. focal length multiplier).

5D Mark III equivalent aperture

Aperture is a lens characteristic, so it's calculated only for fixed lens cameras. If you want to know the equivalent aperture for Canon 5D Mark III, take the aperture of the lens you're using and multiply it with crop factor.

Since crop factor for Canon 5D Mark III is 1, the equivalent aperture is aperture.

808 PureView equivalent aperture

Crop factor = 3.28
Aperture = f2.4

35-mm equivalent aperture = (f2.4) × 3.28 = f7.9

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