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earwaxuk

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Location: United KingdomMember since: 13 May, 2003

All Feedback (171)

l***u (215)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Good communication from seller, Item as described. Arrived in good time. Thank you.
1***e (711)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past month
Verified purchase
Item arrived as described, thank you.
a***6 (346)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past month
Verified purchase
Product as described with fast delivery. New bag is perfect for work for me to fit a small laptop, camera and my sandwiches & a drink. Thankyou very much.
m***n (1675)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
Verified purchase
Nice item as described arrived very quickly All good would buy from here again
s***t (233)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
Verified purchase
Item went missing in post, seller promote in response and refunded quickly. Good Seller. Thankyou.
adams-discount-electronics (23430)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
Verified purchase
Good comms, quick payment and great feedback. This buyer is always welcome here.
Reviews (8)
26 Feb, 2008
Why buy anything else?
I purchased this camera after several months of research into DSLRs. I looked at the Nikon D40x and the Canon EOS 400D as they are all in a similar price range. However the decision was in fact quite a simple one. The Olympus can come with a 14-42mm and a 40-150mm lens which, when taking the 2X crop factor into account, gives a fantastic 24-300mm focal range. Combined with an in body image stabiliser, the only really effective dust reduction system available on the market and live view, this makes for a fantastic package. Handling the E-510 is a joy with a proper grip on the body, something the smaller E-410 is sadly lacking, which means the camera feels secure and stable in your hand, even at the 300mm end of the standard kit telephoto lens. The out of the box results from this camera are excellent and Olympus have done a fantastic job of dealing with the noise issues previously associated with the Four Thirds system. Given the recent advances in Four Thirds LMOS sensor design noise really isn't an issue until above about ISO 800. I have found the best image quality at lower than ISO 400 comes from turning off the noise filter and reducing the sharpening at which point I can find no real difference between the Nikon, Canon or Olympus, even when pixel peeping. Above ISO 400 a small amount of noise reduction is an advantage as is the case for all DSLRs under £1500. That said this camera returns excellent results straight out of the box. Of course, shooting in RAW format helps immensely, especially if you are used to shooting in JPEG formats as the level of detail is spectacular. The menu system is intuitive and with the information screen turned on (if not using the live view option) it is simple to adjust all the parameters. Olympus have also spent some time thinking about the handling of the camera. All the knobs and buttons are laid out sensibly and all within easy reach when using the camera, something that cannot be said of the Nikon D40x. The camera has dedicated buttons for white balance, ISO, metering and AF mode which makes quick selection of the ideal settings quick and easy. The 14-42mm and 40-150mm lenses are exceptional for kit lenses. The 14-42mm lens performs brilliantly in every condition I have tried it in and also produces surprisingly sharp and clear macro shots with no evidence of lens distortion. With the range of Four Thirds mount lenses growing thanks to significant input from Sigma there is now a huge range of glassware available right up to professional levels (best start saving now!). The autofocus, while only having 3 focus points in comparison to up to 51 on some Nikons, may seem under specified but having used the E-510 back to back with an EOS 400D and a Nikon D40x there is little real world difference and the same things confuse the autofocus systems on all 3 cameras. If anything, I found trying to select appropriate focus points something of a challenge on the Nikon. All in all, this camera offers a huge feature list including the surprisingly effect sensor shift based image stabiliser, excellent controls via the info screen, a fast responsive shutter, autofocus while in live view mode (a genuine rarity), selectable colour spaces, an in camera RAW development facility and online firmware upgrades. Add to this the excellent kit lenses (the 14-42mm lens leaves the Canon 18-55mm kit lens in its wake) and a brilliant price, it leaves you wondering why you would buy anything else!
21 of 21 found this helpful
02 Mar, 2009
A great lens
The Olympus Zuiko ED 50-200mm f/2.8-3.5 lens is, simply put, a great lens. The f/2.8 maximum aperture is professional level fast and Olympus have treated the build quality as such. A weather/environmentally sealed body, large firm zoom ring, solid tripod mount and ED glass make for a truly pro-grade lens. This particular model has perhaps one major advantage over the newer SWD model. Because of the SWD drive in the newer model, the maximum aperture drops off more quickly. Ultimately this means that this lens is faster than it’s newer sibling throughout the zoom range. This might not sound like much but, honestly, it makes a difference. “Hang on a minute! This lens doesn’t have the SWD focussing speed” I hear you cry. Unless you have an SWD compatible body (E-30, E-3 etc) this makes no difference. I’ve been using one of these on my E-510 and it’s considerably faster than the consumer grade 70-300mm or 40-150mm (both in terms of focussing and aperture). If you have an E-5xx or E-4xx (and potentially the newly announced E-6xx) model camera, you don’t have the facility to run the SWD drive anyway. In real terms, both this model and the SWD model focus at the same speed on non-SWD cameras. Coupled with the faster aperture on this model, I would genuinely recommend this one over the newer one. All in all, 5 out of 5, a great lens. Pro image quality, pro build quality, well sealed, bomb proof casing and a proper focussing distance scale (something sadly missing from more and more consumer lenses these days). Coupled with the 4/3 sensor crop of 2x, meaning the lens is a 100-400mm in film terms, you really can’t ask for more. I mean, 400mm (35mm eqiv.) at f/3.5?
5 of 5 found this helpful
26 Feb, 2008
Why buy anything else?
I purchased this camera after several months of research into DSLRs. I looked at the Nikon D40x and the Canon EOS 400D as they are all in a similar price range. However the decision was in fact quite a simple one. The Olympus can come with a 14-42mm and a 40-150mm lens which, when taking the 2X crop factor into account, gives a fantastic 24-300mm focal range. Combined with an in body image stabiliser, the only really effective dust reduction system available on the market and live view, this makes for a fantastic package. Handling the E-510 is a joy with a proper grip on the body, something the smaller E-410 is sadly lacking, which means the camera feels secure and stable in your hand, even at the 300mm end of the standard kit telephoto lens. The out of the box results from this camera are excellent and Olympus have done a fantastic job of dealing with the noise issues previously associated with the Four Thirds system. Given the recent advances in Four Thirds LMOS sensor design noise really isn't an issue until above about ISO 800. I have found the best image quality at lower than ISO 400 comes from turning off the noise filter and reducing the sharpening at which point I can find no real difference between the Nikon, Canon or Olympus, even when pixel peeping. Above ISO 400 a small amount of noise reduction is an advantage as is the case for all DSLRs under £1500. That said this camera returns excellent results straight out of the box. Of course, shooting in RAW format helps immensely, especially if you are used to shooting in JPEG formats as the level of detail is spectacular. The menu system is intuitive and with the information screen turned on (if not using the live view option) it is simple to adjust all the parameters. Olympus have also spent some time thinking about the handling of the camera. All the knobs and buttons are laid out sensibly and all within easy reach when using the camera, something that cannot be said of the Nikon D40x. The camera has dedicated buttons for white balance, ISO, metering and AF mode which makes quick selection of the ideal settings quick and easy. The 14-42mm and 40-150mm lenses are exceptional for kit lenses. The 14-42mm lens performs brilliantly in every condition I have tried it in and also produces surprisingly sharp and clear macro shots with no evidence of lens distortion. With the range of Four Thirds mount lenses growing thanks to significant input from Sigma there is now a huge range of glassware available right up to professional levels (best start saving now!). The autofocus, while only having 3 focus points in comparison to up to 51 on some Nikons, may seem under specified but having used the E-510 back to back with an EOS 400D and a Nikon D40x there is little real world difference and the same things confuse the autofocus systems on all 3 cameras. If anything, I found trying to select appropriate focus points something of a challenge on the Nikon. All in all, this camera offers a huge feature list including the surprisingly effect sensor shift based image stabiliser, excellent controls via the info screen, a fast responsive shutter, autofocus while in live view mode (a genuine rarity), selectable colour spaces, an in camera RAW development facility and online firmware upgrades. Add to this the excellent kit lenses (the 14-42mm lens leaves the Canon 18-55mm kit lens in its wake) and a brilliant price, it leaves you wondering why you would buy anything else!
13 of 13 found this helpful