REVIEWS / POINT AND SHOOT / OLYMPUS IMAGING INDIA PVT. LTD.

Olympus PEN E-P2

08 Dec, 2009, 12:59 pm IST | Gagan Gupta | Point and Shoot Point and Shoot


PRICE IN INDIA

47,777
View Stores

TECH2 RATING

10

AVERAGE USER RATING

How we test

CONTACT

Olympus Imaging India Pvt. Ltd.

 inquiry@olympus.in

 +91 22 614 20400

 www.olympus-imaging.co.in

For years I've been writing about bridge cameras - cameras that are advanced enough to bridge the gap between consumer cameras and DSLRs. But the bridge factor on these cameras have been the advance features like higher zoom level, better manual control options and even manual ring-based focus and zoom controls. But the biggest differentiating factor between compacts and DSLRs have been rarely touched upon, which is the sensor size. The 12.3 megapixel Olympus E-P2 with its bigger 4/3" sensor promises to truly bridge that gap.

 

 

You can't help but instantly love the retro looks of the EP2. The metallic body, the old-school design, all take you back to the eighties where models like these were ruling the enthusiast photography market.

The Olympus E-P2 borrows a lot from the EP-1 (released earlier this year, but not in India), and even the features seem to be pretty much the same at face value. Sized at 121 x 70 x 36 mm the E-P2 is not exactly the kind of camera you can (or should) carry around in your pocket. Like a DSLR it requires the lenses to be purchased separately, so you don't have a default lens attached at all times. The unit we got for review had a 14-42mm f3.5-5.6 kit lens which is equivalent to a 35mm equivalent of 28-84mm.

Getting back to the 4/3" sensor, at 18.00 x 13.50 mm it's pretty much capable of being inside a DSLR camera, which gives it a huge jump in performance when compared to any other compact camera. The thing is that even though the sensor is DSLR ready, the camera in all its functionality is a high-end consumer camera.

 

 

You have a good looking LCD display and live view and none of that optical viewfinder business. The E-P2 also bundles with a neat little electronic viewfinder that fits on the hotshoe, and can tilt to adjust to your viewing convenience. The weird thing here is that the camera doesn't have any flash built-in on the body. You do have that hotshoe to fit in external flashes, but an on-camera flash has always been a basic requirement, which seemed to have been overlooked here. E-P2 works with a mechanical shutter that further narrows the gap between consumer compacts and DSLR cams.

 

 

All the manual shooting options are present here, including 2 separate control wheels for setting the aperture and the shutter speed (not dedicated to those functions, but there nonetheless). The whole camera seems to have a very mechanical feel to it, starting from its looks to the sound that the shutter release makes. It's like they've taken the best bits out of 'old-school' and pressed them into this cam.

Tags: Olympus , PEN , E-P2 , 12 megapixel , digicam , digital camera

Would you buy it?




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