Advertisment
Advertisment
Promo

Olympus E-400: Another SLR beats the dust

As anyone who has made the move from a film to digital SLR knows, dust can be unexpectedly annoying. It creeps into your camera when you change the lens, then settles on the sensor and appears as an out-of-focus grey blob on your images. This wasn't a problem with film cameras, because the dust particles move with the film when it's wound on. But with a dSLR, the dust stays on the sensor until you find a way to remove it.

Like earlier Olympus SLR models, the new E-400 is fitted with a 'Supersonic Wave Filter' to combat this problem. Every time you turn on the camera, the supersonic wave engine surrounding the sensor's filter vibrates it at a high frequency, shaking off the particles. We tested the filter in the Olympus Evolt E-300 and found that it worked very well.

The E-400 is yet another dSLR joining the 10-megapixel bandwagon. In the last few months various manufacturers have unveiled entry-level 10-megapixel cameras including the Sony Alpha DSLR-A100, the Nikon D80 and the Canon EOS 400D.

Olympus is also promoting the E-400 as "the world's smallest digital SLR". Weighing about as much as a large pack of digestive biscuits (380g), and measuring just 120mm by 90mm by 50mm, it certainly is small. Unfortunately, we find that having a small camera is a mixed blessing -- it's certainly easier to travel with, but we find small dSLRs can be harder to hold and handle.

The camera accepts a wide range of interchangeable lenses, including the Olympus Zuiko Digital Top Pro lens range, which recently won an award from the European Imaging & Sound Association (EISA).

The E-400 should be available in the UK in November, but pricing has not yet been confirmed. -IM

Anonymous User Avatar

Your email address must be entered but will not be displayed

Copy the letters and numbers to prove you're a human being. If you can't read this image, get another one. If you don't want to do this each time, register.

Random characters

All submitted content becomes the sole property of CBS Interactive and may be used, edited or rejected at CBS Interactive's sole discretion. You acknowledge that you, not CBS Interactive, are responsible for the contents of your submission. -- see Terms of Use