Hello Guest, Login | Register
Home » Olympus » Olympus E-620, Digital SLR Camera
Olympus E-620, Digital SLR Camera

Olympus E-620, Digital SLR Camera

Reg. Price : $
Price: $
You save: $
This Best Selling Olympus E-620, Digital SLR Camera Tends to SELL OUT VERY FAST!! if this is a MUST HAVE product, be sure to - Order Now to avoid disappointment
Filed under : Olympus, tags:

The olympus most recent E-620 DSLR targets users who are concerned in something better than a budget entry-level DSLRs, that do not want to pay for an upper mid-range or semi-pro body. This fresh camera is bundled with features by the higher-end E-30, but uses a body that’s closer in size to the compact E-420 DSLR. Through combination high-end features in a compact body, Olympus addresses many of the complaints users had with the past E-520 and E-420 models. In essence, The E-620 beginnings with the E-520’s popular built-in Image Stabilization and combines it with the higher resolution sensor of the E-30 also as Art Filters and an articulating 2.7-inch screen.

The Olympus E-620 is a 12.3 Megapixel DSLR on built-in anti-shake facilities and Live View enhanced by a fully-articulated 2.7in screen. Annunciated in February 2009, it’s placed between the entry-level E-4xx series and the higher-end E-30, and although Olympus continues to trade the E-520 at the time of writing, we expect the E-620 to replace them extra time.

As such, the E-620 represents a come forward from budget entry-level models for those who want a more advanced camera without having to invest in an upper mid-range or semi-pro body.

About the surface, the E-620 comes along to take one of our favourite approaches to the problem of designing a consumer DSLR: offer a compact but feature loaded camera at a cost that’s low enough to continue the model squarely out of serious enthusiast territory – which is to say, well under $1000. Users may have more option than ever in the “step up” entry-level realm this days, but with such technology carried over directly from the E-30, we approached the E-620 with the assumption that it would be a effective camera fit for serious shooters, in spite of its size.

On performance numbers roughly equivalent to what we came across from the E-30 in most respects, the E-620 did not top the list in terms of accelerate. Without doubt the slower focusing 14-42mm kit lens played a role in the differential between the E-30 and the E-620 in our “straight from the box” AF tests. Simultaneously, there’s a lot of solid performance to work on here.