Olympus E-M10

I found that the EM5 was as small as I could manage and even then kept nudging buttons accidentally. Mostly I resorted to using the HDL-6 horizontal grip, so I think that the EM10 may be too small for many men.
 
Granted. Small is most definitely not always better. It would be a great carry around with its new compact zoom, with very little compromise on speed and IQ.
 
Id rather get an EM5.

Seems to make more sense at the moment - EM5 body can be had new for £495 (hdew, grey import) or EU stock (Finland online store - if they deliver to the UK) or UK stock can be had with the 12-50 lens for around £850 last time I looked, but Olympus throw in a grip and 45mm lens for 'free' so if you factor in the cost of those (£200 + £200 + £100 for the 12-50) then the EM5 body works out at around £350. Or sell the grip, 45mm lens and kit lens for around £400, making the body £450.

EM10 is £500 - but no 5 axis IBIS (not sure how much difference this makes in practice?) or weather sealing. Guess it depends how important those 2 features are. Obviously launch price should fall over time and the EM5 is nearly 2 years old...
 
Seems to make more sense at the moment - EM5 body can be had new for £495 (hdew, grey import) or EU stock (Finland online store - if they deliver to the UK) or UK stock can be had with the 12-50 lens for around £850 last time I looked, but Olympus throw in a grip and 45mm lens for 'free' so if you factor in the cost of those (£200 + £200 + £100 for the 12-50) then the EM5 body works out at around £350. Or sell the grip, 45mm lens and kit lens for around £400, making the body £450.

EM10 is £500 - but no 5 axis IBIS (not sure how much difference this makes in practice?) or weather sealing. Guess it depends how important those 2 features are. Obviously launch price should fall over time and the EM5 is nearly 2 years old...

The kit cost would be more like.... 130 + 100 + 120. Body only £475. But still a better deal than the lower spec 10.

I think the EM5 also has a better EVF, so quite a few things imo making it a better camera. 5 axis is much better.
 
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I mean vs the new prices of those items (assuming you wanted them and would have been buying them anyway). Bought new, the EM5 grip is £200 ish, the 45mm 1.8 also £200 ish. Could sell them of course, but both are well worth having and kit lens probably worth keeping for a cheap way to 12mm and handy 'macro' feature given that you would only get £100 or so by selling it going by ebay sold listings.

EVF is the same as EM5 according to this: http://www.dpreview.com/previews/olympus-om-d-e-m10/3 - in fact slightly improved in one regard: "The built in electronic viewfinder is straight from the OM-D EM-5 and so is large and a pleasure to use. It also gains another E-M1 feature –adaptive brightness which means especially dark or bright areas appear as they do to the naked eye – rival systems tend to overcompensate in extreme lighting making it difficult to asses the image." (From: http://blog.parkcameras.com/2014/01/olympus-launch-new-om-d-e-m10.html )

DPR preview page claims only half a stop difference between 3 and 5 axis (CIPA), but says 5 axis is better for close up subjects ("not quite as effective (particularly when shooting close-ups"). Having not compared them I have no personal experience of that though.
 
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The EM-10 also has WiFi which can be used for remote control or transferring images and has a built in flash. The screen is also higher resolution than the EM-5.
 
I mean vs the new prices of those items (assuming you wanted them and would have been buying them anyway). Bought new, the EM5 grip is £200 ish, the 45mm 1.8 also £200 ish. Could sell them of course, but both are well worth having and kit lens probably worth keeping for a cheap way to 12mm and handy 'macro' feature given that you would only get £100 or so by selling it going by ebay sold listings.

EVF is the same as EM5 according to this: http://www.dpreview.com/previews/olympus-om-d-e-m10/3 - in fact slightly improved in one regard: "The built in electronic viewfinder is straight from the OM-D EM-5 and so is large and a pleasure to use. It also gains another E-M1 feature –adaptive brightness which means especially dark or bright areas appear as they do to the naked eye – rival systems tend to overcompensate in extreme lighting making it difficult to asses the image." (From: http://blog.parkcameras.com/2014/01/olympus-launch-new-om-d-e-m10.html )

DPR preview page claims only half a stop difference between 3 and 5 axis (CIPA), but says 5 axis is better for close up subjects ("not quite as effective (particularly when shooting close-ups"). Having not compared them I have no personal experience of that though.

Thanks for the link. Sounds good now all the extra features are being published. I like inbuilt flash for the odd occasion. 25mm 1.8 is also welcome if its as good as the 45.
 
EM10 doesn't scream as much of a release to me, I'd still plump for the cheaper EM5 even now
 
It's not cheaper for UK stock that I can see?

Some more comparison details from here: Link

What the E-M10 and E-M5 share:

  • The same 16mp Live Mos Sensor
  • Contrast detection AF
  • Same EVF resolution (1,440,000-dot)
Strengths of the E-M5 in comparison to the E-M10:
  • 5 axis stabilisation: the E-M10 IS only works on three axes (it lacks the vertical and horizontal shift axes, more on that later)
  • slightly faster continuous shooting mode (9fps on the E-M5 vs. 8 fps on the E-M10 in AF-S mode)
  • weather-sealed body: the E-M10 body is not weather sealed.
Strengths of the E-M10 in comparison to the E-M5:
  • A newer image processor (True Pic VII instead of VI)
  • No AA filter
  • 81 AF target areas (E-M5 has 35 target areas)
  • Advanced WiFi capabilities
  • A higher speed rate mode for the EVF (120 fps) with Adaptive Brightness Technology (same as the E-M1) and shorter latency
  • An improved button layout
  • A built-in flash
 
It is when you take into account splitting the em5 kit as above after the promo. That's uk stock.
 
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I'm not familiar with HDEW, but I would guess the EM10 should be cheaper there than the EM5 when it's available to buy? As always everyone wants something different from their cameras, but I don't see anything that the EM5 does and the EM10 doesn't that I'd be bothered about. Having said that I'd be more likely to get a GX7 than either ;)
 
Just my opinion, regarding buying, I'd get the EM5 from HDEW for £495.

I think that would make the most sense for anyone who did not want the grip, 45mm and 12-50 - hardly any difference in price after selling those and avoids the hassle of selling them.
 
I think that would make the most sense for anyone who did not want the grip, 45mm and 12-50 - hardly any difference in price after selling those and avoids the hassle of selling them.

Avoids the hassle but HDEW sell grey stock. Some prefer UK stock.
 
Whilst on the subject of Olympus cameras, are there any E-M5 owners using either Canon FD, or M42 fit lenses on this body, via adapters of course?

PS. I should add that I am aware there is a dedicated thread for the E-M5, but I was being lazy and wanted a quick answer:)
 
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I have used lots of 'legacy' lenses including FD, Pentax M42 etc. Generally they are OK, some better than others, but the crop factor is a killler. Even a Leica summicron probably isn't as sharp as you might like. They just are not designed for the format.
 
I have used lots of 'legacy' lenses including FD, Pentax M42 etc. Generally they are OK, some better than others, but the crop factor is a killler. Even a Leica summicron probably isn't as sharp as you might like. They just are not designed for the format.


Thanks for your reply. I already use M42 lenses on my Canon 7D with great results, but was thinking of getting a DSLR body for my FD lenses, I also use these lenses on my T90 film body, so didn't want to carry out any alterations to the mounts. Other than the Olympus, I was thinking of Sony or Pentax.
 
I have just bought a Sony A7 and it works well with Olympus OM and longer Leica M mount lenses. It is much better than the mFT for this type of lens I am finding. I no longer have any other 'legacy' lenses, I sold them all to get some cupboard space.
 
Thanks for your reply. I already use M42 lenses on my Canon 7D with great results, but was thinking of getting a DSLR body for my FD lenses, I also use these lenses on my T90 film body, so didn't want to carry out any alterations to the mounts. Other than the Olympus, I was thinking of Sony or Pentax.

You have to be careful with FD as as far as I know you need an adapter with a lens in it to retain infinity focus when mounting FD on Canon DSLR's.

I've used Rokkor and Zuiko lenses on my Panasonic G1 and Sony A7 and I have to say that I'm very happy with the results and they look sharp even at 100%. Of course on MFT you have the 2x crop factor but I liked my 24mm f2.8, 35mm f1.8 and 50mm f1.7 and f1.8 lenses on MFT and quickly adapted even to the 50mm lenses and their equiv. 100mm FoV.
 
You have to be careful with FD as as far as I know you need an adapter with a lens in it to retain infinity focus when mounting FD on Canon DSLR's.

I've used Rokkor and Zuiko lenses on my Panasonic G1 and Sony A7 and I have to say that I'm very happy with the results and they look sharp even at 100%. Of course on MFT you have the 2x crop factor but I liked my 24mm f2.8, 35mm f1.8 and 50mm f1.7 and f1.8 lenses on MFT and quickly adapted even to the 50mm lenses and their equiv. 100mm FoV.

I already have an FD-EOS adapter, which I do use with my FD 100mm macro lens, although I do have to remove the optics from the adapter and the results are quite good, but not as good as with the M42 lenses. I have a few quite nice FD lenses and would like to use them more on a digital body, thats why I was thinking of a mirror less system. A used Sony Nex looks to be the cheapest option and would also be ideal for the M42 lenses. A camera of that size would easily fit in one pocket and my 50mm Zeiss in another when out walking, rather than a 7D slung over a shoulder.
 
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