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Review of the Olympus 50mm f/2.0

Olympus 50mm f/2.0

Olympus 50mm f/2.0
www.olympus.co.uk As part of the four-thirds system the Olympus lenses, in effect, double in equivalent focal lengths, so this lens offers a similar angle of view as a 100mm lens on the E-system cameras. One of advantage of this is that lenses are much smaller than their 35mm or APS-C compatible equivalents. Zuiko lenses have always been high quality, and this one is no exception with dust proof and drip-proof construction, ED glass and a fast f/2.0 maximum aperture and f/22 minimum aperture. Bear in mind though, that the smaller imaging circle will produce more depth of field, so extremely small apertures are unnecessary. The optic has a multilayer film coating, and minimum focusing is 24cm with a 1:2 magnification ratio. Unlike some other lenses, there is no size ratio guides on the lens, which is a disappointment. Performance is good, particularly in JPEG shooting rather than unsharpened RAW. The MTF charts show very high performance with natural camera sharpening in JPEG, but performance is more on a par with the Pentax lenses in unsharpened RAW mode. Where the lens performs well is in the Chromatic Aberation arena, with low edge-to-centre fringing throughout the lens.

Specification

Model Olympus 50mm f/2.0
RRP £355
Optical Contruction 11/10
Minimum Focus Distance 24cm
Filter Size 52mm
Dimensions 71 x 61.5
Weight 300g