When you did the 4sec test and 8 sec test, was the write speed the same? As 510 write diff is very obvious.
No difference on my end.
When you did the 4sec test and 8 sec test, was the write speed the same? As 510 write diff is very obvious.
Tried Pixel Mapping the camera yet? I mean, repeating this for a couple of times. And like the other members mentioned, the hot pixel issue has been around for a while, looks like this is a technology problem for digital cameras.
This is bad. Bring this down to the service centre, and post a new thread on the progress, if you can. Just to share the experience with the community here. Cheers.
Here is a piece of good news for those owning and thinking to own. :thumbsup:
I sent to Olympus service centre and the young lady was nice to do a compare test with another demo set E510. The result on the demo set came out OK for 6sec, while 8 sec came very clean too (includes dim red pixels).
So the conclusion was my new set has some problem.![]()
Hands-on as a macro lens to take close-ups or as a normal portrait lens ?Has anyone use this (E-510) with a dedicated macro lens of 100mm and up? For example, sigma 105 F2.8 macro? I read on the internet that this particular lens is available in 4/3rds mount. Anyone got hands-on with this combo?
Hands-on as a macro lens to take close-ups or as a normal portrait lens ?
A 1:1 lens is a 1:1. Period. That means 1mm in real life is equal to 1mm on your sensor, regardless of size. Oly is confusing with this crop factor and 35mm equivalent stuff. A 100mm lens is a 100mm lens also, not more nor less.For macros. If used with E510, does it mean 2:1 magnification is achieveable? Since the lens is a 1:1 lens and the camera is 2X factored, would it appear in a sense to be 2:1 even though it's just a crop? What's your comfortable handholding speed on a macro subject such as 20 cent coin at 1:1? Hope it's not too much to ask of you, thanks![]()
Does the manual really say you can do it?
The only models I know of is the E-3xx which they probably refer to. The E-510 did not exist when the FL-50 was designed so the flash's manual is not written for that camera.Well, OlyFlyer, yes and no. See the bottom of page 25 in the FL-50 manual. It says you can do it, giving a drawing of how the lighting from the two flashes will illuminate the subject. (I used my E20 and FL40 on a flash bracket in this manner.) Then the manual goes on to say that the built-in flash on some models may be disabled with the FL-50 in the hot shoe. I kinda thought that might refer to some brand x camera, but not a camera that's part of a system.
I had hope that someone would tell me about a new Olympus cable that would provide the solution.
Oh well, I can always hope.
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