Olympus E-5

Olympus E-5
Type Digital single-lens reflex
Sensor Four Thirds 17.3 mm x 13.0 mm Live MOS
Maximum resolution 4032 x 3024 pixels (12.3 megapixels)
Lens Interchangeable (Four Thirds System)
Flash built-in pop up flash GN=13 at ISO 100, wireless control for up to 3 external flash groups and 4 channels
Shutter 1/8,000 to 60 s computerized focal plane shutter
Exposure metering TTL, evaluative (ESP), center-weighted, spot
Exposure modes Program, shutter-priority, aperture-priority, manual
Metering modes ESP multi patterned, Center-weighted average (60%), Spot (2%)
Focus areas 11 biaxial cross auto-focus points, selectable
Focus modes Single, continuous, manual
Continuous shooting 5.0 frames per second (19 images RAW buffer)
Viewfinder Optical TTL with pentaprism 100% field of view and ×1.15 magnification
Rear LCD monitor 3" 920,000 pixel TFT LCD on full articulating multi-angle screen with live preview
Storage CompactFlash(CF) or SD/SDHC/SSDXC
Battery Olympus BLM-1 1500 mAh; Olympus BLM-5 1620 mAh Lithium-ion battery
Made in China

The Olympus E-5 is Olympus Corporation's flagship camera, positioned as a professional DSLR camera. It is the successor to the Olympus E-3, which was launched on October 17, 2007. The E-5 was announced on September 14, 2010. The E-5, like the other cameras in the Olympus E-series, conforms to the Four Thirds System.

Features

The E-5 has a live preview full articulating screen, contrast-detect autofocus in live view mode, and the ability to control up to three wireless flash groups without external transmitters. The camera is also fully weatherproof even with the popup flash in the "up" position when used with weatherproofed lenses such as the Zuiko Digital "High Grade" and "Super High Grade" lines. Like many recent DSLR's, it can record video; the E-5 supports resolutions up to 720p. It is very similar to the E-3 that preceded it in operation and design.

Additional features include:

The camera is compatible with existing BLM-1 batteries used in the E-1, E-3, E-300, E-30, E-500 and E-510.

Recent iterations of Olympus DSLR's (including the E-420, E-520, E-620, E-30, and E-3) have used a relatively strong antialias filter. This has the effect of eliminating moire and aliasing artifacts, but reduces the camera's ability to capture very fine detail when used with very sharp lenses. In the E-5, Olympus has chosen to use a much weaker antialias filter along with a new software demosaicing/sharpening algorithm that is claimed to preserve fine detail while eliminating moire. In principle this approach allows the E-5 to capture more fine detail than cameras with similar resolution (when used with sufficiently sharp lenses).

Along with other Olympus 4/3rds bodies, the E-5 has an on-demand pixel mapping, a dust reduction system, vignetting and distortion correction either in-camera or during editing with Olympus software.

References

    External links

    Media related to Olympus E-5 at Wikimedia Commons

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