DSLR Review: Olympus EVOLT E-510
Published September 24, 2007
Back on August 1, Olympus PR invited me to attend the Legg Mason Tennis Classic here in Washington, DC and shoot with their new DSLR, the EVOLT E-510. I enjoyed myself thoroughly at that event, and my thanks go out to Michael Bourne from Mullen, the agency that handles the PR for Olympus.
When I arrived there, I was given a review kit for the E-510, containing the camera, the FL-36 Speedlite, and the two-lens kit (14-42mm and 40-150mm). For my review, I did what I usually do: I used the review unit as my primary camera for a month, taking note of the experience. What you'll get now are my impressions of the camera, after taking thousands of photographs with it in various light and weather conditions, indoors and outdoors.
You can choose to watch a hands-on video review or jump past it to read my written review.
The E-510 is a prosumer camera made to be portable, affordable, and easy to use. The E-510, a 10-megapixel DSLR, is smaller and lighter than its predecessor, the E-500, which I reviewed this past January. Even though it's smaller, the grip was designed so well that I could hold the camera comfortably, without missing the heft of the E-500 or that of my personal camera, the Canon 5D. (I like my cameras a little chunky, they're easier to stabilize that way.) The E-510 was even lighter than I thought with a lens mounted on it. The two-lens kit includes two premium lenses designed for travel and portability. They're incredibly light given their focal range. I expected the 14-42mm lens to be light, but I was blown away by how small and light the 40-150mm lens was. Olympus really did an amazing job with the lenses and the camera when it came to portability. The whole kit (camera, lenses, Speedlite, and charger) was so light I could carry it anywhere very easily. I could run with it and barely felt its weight — as a matter of fact, I did just that on a couple of hikes through the forest.
The thing to remember when looking at focal lengths with any Olympus DSLR is that they've got a 2x crop factor. It's because they use the 4:3 standard, which specifies a sensor size of approximately half the dimensions of a full frame sensor (17.3 mm vs. 36 mm and 13 mm vs. 24 mm). This means the surface area of the sensor is 1/4th that of a full frame sensor. It also means you need to multiply the focal length listed on each lens by two in order to get the effective focal length. If the math is a bit confusing, just keep remember the crop factor and you'll do fine.
- DSLR Review: Olympus EVOLT E-510
- Published: September 24, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Sci/Tech
- Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Personal Tech, Culture: Photography
- Writer: Raoul Pop
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