


It’s flexible and reliable and flash metering I found to be rather good too. The former is a 49-segment system with Digital ESP centre-weighted average, spot and highlight or shadow based spot metering. Heavy use of Live View and the built-in flash will impact on this as I found and so expect around 300 shots on average. Compact lithium ion battery pack that is good for around 500-shots says Olympus. Other signature features include Olympus’ widely regarded Super Sonic Wave Filter dust removal system, dual card storage (CF Type I/II and xD-Picture Card) and the excellent. This system I find to be neat, intuitive and brings to the fingertips a stunning level of control and without needing to dig into menus or with the camera needing hundreds of buttons. This brings alive each option displayed on the camera’s screen scrolling options is via the four-way jog buttons, adjustments via the control wheel on the top plate.Īlternatively, after another press of “OK”, activates that option’s menu item and turning the control wheels scrolls through the available options (you can still use the four-way jog buttons too if you wish). The excellent fast-access to almost all camera setting options (of which you can adjust almost every single thing on the camera, is, perhaps, a weakness) is via the central “OK” button. The control layout is the same as on the E400 with the old camera’s function button being replaced with a screen toggle and Live View activation button. And as kit lenses go, both are well above average, so while not necessarily the brightest in terms of maximum apertures at your disposal, they’re sharp the inclusion of Olympus’ ED glass in their makeup, helps get the most from the new 10-megapixel Live-MOS sensor.Īs for the handling, the E410 is as good as it’s forbear, which, incidentally was criticized for only being available in Europe: not so the new model. The E410 is sold as body only, a kit with the 14-42mm optic or as a dual lens kit with both the lenses detailed above. The kit lenses include a very compact and cute-looking Olympus, Zuiko F3.5-5.6, 14-42mm (28-84mm 35mm film equivalent) optic and a new, F4-5.6, 40-150mm (80-300mm 35mm equiv’) zoom lens, which, between them, provide an excellent 28-300mm focal length range. The E410 benefits from two new kit lenses (as well as any and all lenses available to the 4/3rd system, a total of 23 from Olympus, 11 from Sigma and two from Panasonic/Leica at the time of writing).
OLYMPUS MASTER 2 CAMERA E410 ISO
Once the noise processing kicks in, you do get a level of overly aggressive detail smoothing as a result, but, because you can shoot at up to ISO 800 with relative confidence in terms of noise, noise processing can be left on hold for all but the highest ISO shots, particularly where detail importance supercedes annoyance value of any noise artifacts. However, those noise problems don’t become obvious until you get to the ISO 800 level, or above so the E410 is much better than its predecessor in that department.īut, and there’s always one of those it seems. Here, however, there appears to be increased noise processing at higher sensitivities than compared with the E400. Other tweaks to the E410 include a new approach to noise suppression and processing thanks to the new, TruPic III image engine that’s faster, and affords better noise reduction and processing.
OLYMPUS MASTER 2 CAMERA E410 MANUAL
Live View allows you to use the camera’s 2.5-inch colour screen to compose images in a way similar to composing and on a digital compact it includes magnification for manual focusing and allows AF, although the mirror must still flip out of the way to do so which slows things down and is bit noisy to boot. Overall, its design, build, and shooting options remain unchanged (also read my Olympus E400 review for more specifics on these), the E410 includes a new, Matsushita-made Live-MOS sensor that affords the previously unique-to-Olympus-DSLRs Live View feature rather flatteringly to Olympus, in my view, Canon’s new top-end EOS 1D Mk III has a version of the system. (Pocket-lint) - Barely 6 months on from the launch of the E400, Olympus announced an updated version of that camera which, while almost identical, has a couple of important differences.
