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Best Ever FourThirds DSLR? What to and not to expect from the new Olympus E-5 Modelo de preproducción (firmware 1.0) Khen Lim, Zone-10 Part 4 of 5 E-5; 1/100 sec, f3.2, Aperture-AE, ISO 1600, 0.0EV, ESP, no flash, 14-54mm at 36mm, AWB (Art #0405-00)
Picture #5: Bicycle Wheels Location: Netherlands Filename: A132244 (Art #0405-01) | Format: JPEG | Shutter speed: 1/200 sec | Aperture: f5.0 | Mode: Program | ISO Setting: ISO 100 | EV Comp: 0.0 | Metering: ESP | Supplementation: No flash | Lens 50-200mm SWD | Focal Length: 60mm | White Balance: Sunny | Observation Notes: Ron Moes: “The high sharpness and material expression and also the dynamic range have been improved compared to the E 3.” Khen: Two words come to mind when I saw this photo – crisp and clear. I use these two words to describe image definition; the very quality of the E-5’s capture and reproduction capabilities. The combination of the E-5 and 50-200mm SWD is compelling in this photo – you can check out the sharpness at the periphery to quell any doubts. In fact a closed-up look will reveal far more than what the eyes can see whether it is near the wheel hub, the tyre wall, the pedal crank, wheel dynamo or some other markings. Everywhere you look, the details are faithfully retained. Here are two examples - an 882x659 pixel and a 749x525 pixel crop of two different areas within the photo: Crisply reproducible image details taken from a close crop at higher magnification (Art #0405-02ab) Exposure-wise, everything is extremely clear. Colours are evenly separated and no colours appear to be responding abnormally.
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