Although Olympus' OM-D range is traditionally aimed at pros, it has a lot of features which appeal to those without the bank balance to match.
Although Olympus' OM-D range is traditionally aimed at pros, it has a lot of features which appeal to those without the bank balance to match.
The Olympus O-MD E-M10 Mark II is a solid choice for experienced photographers - pros and amateur enthusiasts alike - who want a small camera that doesn't skimp on features, performance or image quality.
Extensive/sophisticated feature set; Most buttons are customizable; Top-notch image quality; Good performance
Features/dials/buttons can be overwhelming; Continuous AF/tracking accuracy is erratic; No 4K video
I purchased this camera last week and been using it ever since. I love it. the size, the weight is just perfect. I take it every. I use to have a Canon 60D, the camera is a great, but it's way too large and heavy for me to carry around. this is so portable, it's just perfect.
When a company introduces a new camera, it usually fits into one of the following three categories: a) a brand new camera that inaugurates a new line-up (E-M1, E-M10), b) a substantial upgrade from the predecessor with lots of new features (E-M5 II) or c) a refined version of an already existing...
Olympus' OM-D range is getting stronger with every camera released. The E-M10 II provides a great entry-level option to those photographers who would like the idea of the OM-D system but aren't ready to spend upwards of £800 on the E-M5 II or E-M1.
Olympus' E-M10 II is the perfect starter camera for going mirrorless, or a worthwhile upgrade.
Quality 16MP stills with pleasing colors; Compact; lightweight; Very responsive; Built-in 5-axis image stabilization
Noisy shutter mechanism; No 4K video
The Olympus E-M10 Mark II is the second-generation base OM-D which overtakes some features from the rest of the series. A revised anti-alias-filter-free 16 MP CMOS sensor and new processor allows this digital camera to produce images with richer details than any Micro Four-Thirds camera to date...
Very low image noise; Excellent retention of details; Reliable metering; Good Automatic White-Balance; Excellent built-in 5-axis stabilization; Virtually no shutter-lag; Fast contrast-detect AF; Fast shot-to-shot speed; Very responsive; Solid build quality
Some color inaccuracy; Dynamic-range below other mirrorless; Highly modal interface; Not always Exposure-Priority; Limited EVF and LCD contrast and view-angle; 1s filming delay; Overly complex menu; Uncomfortable eyelets; Short battery-life
Great camera - seriously high quality. The EZ lens is a huge improvement over the older version.
Great camera - seriously high quality; The EZ lens is a huge improvement over the older version
Most of the stuff in the bundle is cheap quality, and I threw it out; I did some testing of the UV filters, and there was terrible degradation in quality; Same with the bonus lenses - really poor quality crap; The tripod is decent, but super light and a bit shaky.
Overall this camera is an excellent value, providing great image quality and a whole host of features while remaining in a small form factor. Low-light performance can be very good with fast prime lenses due to the 5-axis image stabilization (the low-light performance will actually out-perform APS-C...
5-axis image stabilization - Nice EVF - Great build quality and ergonomics while remaining lightweight - Very good IQ with plenty of dynamic range and resolution for my needs - Good lens selection with plenty of small affordable primes available - Touch screen
- No weather sealing - Difficult to achieve good subject isolation with 50mm-equivalent lenses due to micro four-thirds sensor
Image quality with ease of use, even with the auto and scn modes; Once I get used to the advanced settings I expect the pictures will be even better
Lenses are expensive
Copyright © Global Compare Group Limited t/a PriceMe 2024