June 2008

Sigma DP1 is now mine! Finally!

I used the Olympus E-420 for a few days, but the pointy viewfinder, though a minor thing, just bothered me way too much. So I decided to finally get the Sigma DP1, one of the first things I blogged about. The DP1 has its own faults of which the speed is probably its worst. Every review I read commented about that fault making it sound “useless.”  It lowered my expectations to the point that I thought the camera was going to be like a floppy drive Mavica. I’m so glad I read all those horrible reviews. While playing with the camera, I found myself saying, “wow, it’s not that bad.” Now onto the observation bullet points:

  • I used SDHC Class 6 Patriot 4gb card. This made the shot to shot speed feel faster.
  • It is true, the autofocus does not always work in dim light.
  • The autofocus speed when it does work is tolerable.
  • Shutter lag isn’t instant, but still tolerable.
  • I thought menu navigation was going to be sluggish and unresponsive. It isn’t. Viewing images isn’t slow either.
  • It is smaller than I expected. Smaller than the Canon G series.
  • Not as conspicuous as a person carrying a DSLR.
  • I actually like the included strap. I took off the suedette material because I like wearing the camera diagonally.
  • It comes with a fleece pouch that I really do use since I bring the camera with me everywhere I go. I just put it in my bag. Carrying your DSLR with you everywhere you go is bit of a pain.
  • Its dynamic range is nice. I don’t get as many blown highlights like I would with other point and shoots. Maybe better than my D80?
  • It is the ultimate pixel peeper camera.  Looking at the images at 100% magnification is incredible.
  • RAW files are not compatible with Adobe Camera RAW and DNG Converter yet.
  • Sigma Photo Pro is really weird probably because I’m not used to it.
  • If image quality and portability is your main goal, this is the only game in town.

Olympus E-420 with 14-42mm is now mine.

I broke down and bought the E-420 last night. So far, it’s a sweet little camera. Everything is smaller on it, almost 3/4 scale. The 14-42mm looks like it’s about the size of a standard 50mm. Remember in the 60s and 70s when Olympus was making those small SLRs like the OM series and Pen cameras? I like that they’re going back to that. I haven’t had a chance to play with it that much but here are a few observations:

  • The kit lens is not silent like a Wave/USM/HSM motor, but it has the mechanism where the focus ring does not move when focusing, not like the Canon or Nikon 18-55mm lenses. Turns out the manual focus ring is not a mechanical one but electronic. While it turns, it sends a signal to tell the camera to start adjusting focus kind of like a point and shoot.
  • The three position autofocus points seems kind of not that useful (I hate when people say “useless.” Is it really?) because they are so close together. You have to use the menu to switch positions.
  • The viewfinder eyehole sticks out kind of far for my taste. This is actually driving me nuts right now.
  • Does not use standard mini-USB.

Olympus E-420 with 25mm Pancake Lens

I’ve wanted this camera for a while. I’m not sure why I haven’t posted about it earlier. Maybe because I thought I already have. I hate when I do that. My interest was resparked when I found it on sale at Circuit City. Of course this one does not have the 25mm pancake. Anyways, who wouldn’t want a small camera that creates quality images? I considered a Sigma DP1, but it just has too many flaws. I love the Foveon sensor, but the speed of the lens, focusing, and operations apparently is way too slow. The Olympus E-420 is not quite as small or light as a DP1, but it is still considerably smaller and 25% lighter than my current Nikon D80.