photo:olympusomdem1iii
Table of Contents
Olympus OM-D E-M1 Mark III
see also:
Introduction
- announced Feb 2020
- similar to mark II but some of the E-M1X improvements and some extras:
- IBIS now 7EV and 7.5EV in Dual IS
- hand held HiRes mode, Live ND filter effect mode
- improved custom dial mode functionality, My Menu, new rear toggle, USB-C charging
- improved shutter life and weathersealing now has an official rating.
- perhaps disappointingly, video specs have not changed and is limited to 4K 24/30p; 1080HD to 60p, so there is no 120p slo-mo, EVF is not as high resolution as its peers, subject C-AF tracking not as good as the Sony peers, and 2nd SD card slot still only UHS-I not UHS-II
- does not get the E-M1X's Intelligent Subject Detection AF algorithm for tracking defined subjects such as trains, cars, motorbikes nor some of the features of its larger body size such as built-in Field Sensor System.
- does get a couple of features the E-M1X didn't get:
- further improved eye AF tracking
- new status display on LCD or EVF
- improved custom dial mode functionality - 4 custom settings on the dial, and can set it to automatically save current settings when move away from a custom setting which makes for rapid custom setting management
- ability to turn off EVF switching when LCD screen is articulated outwards
- no other camera other than the E-M1X offers a comparable combination of excellent IS, video AF performance, shutter life, weather sealing, usable high-res mode and shooting rate.
Specs
- the same basic features as the Olympus OM-D E-M1 mark II:
- 20mp sensor with 121 cross-type PDAF points covering 75% vertical and 80% horizontal
- mechanical burst still up to 10fps with AF and 15fps fixed focus
- electronic shutter mode still 18fps with AF and 60fps fixed focus
- Pro-Capture mode
- shutter to 1/8000th sec mechanical and 1/32,000th sec electronic
- Live Composite night mode
- 2.36M-dot LCD viewfinder able to work at up to 120 fps
- 3“ 1.04mdot fully articulating rear touch screen
- excellent rolling shutter thanks to a fast sensor readout
- excellent video image stabilisation and C-AF
- UHD 4K/30p video and DCI 24p at up to 237Mbps
- plus some features of the Olympus OMD E-M1X pro sports camera:
- 7EV IBIS (7.5EV Dual IBIS) - the best of any current camera but matching the 1X!
- the new sensor coating and 30,000Hz SSWF shake system which further reduces sensor dust issues
- hand held 50mp HiRes mode with options for 25mp/50mp JPEG outputs
- tripod 80mp HiRes mode with options for 25mp/50mp/80mp JPEG outputs
- Live ND filter effect mode
- Anti-flicker shooting
- 1080HD video up to 120p
- higher rated shutter mechanism now at 400,000 actuations
- customizable 'My Menu' tab - allows up to 35 menu items to be stored
- 8 way joystick controller
- USB-C port with in-camera battery charging (USB PD USB Power Delivery standard)
- extensive, IPX1-rated weather sealing
- plus some new features:
- new TruePic IX processor brings improved face/eye AF (new face and eye AF algorithm) and Starry Sky AF mode (2 modes: Tripod Accuracy Priority, which takes around 10 seconds, and Hand holdable Speed Priority, which takes 2-3 seconds)
- Face Selection mode with a few options to allow you to select a face amongst a number of faces
- new panel option
- thankfully retains much user backward compatibility with the E-MII:
- similar user interface and ergonomics EXCEPT:
- MENU button re-located to top left
- INFO button re-located to bottom right where the menu button was, to make room for the toggle
- Fn1 button is now labelled ISO
- Fn2 button is now labelled as exposure compensation
- PASM dial has 4 custom modes instead of 3, plus a Bulb setting but sensibly no longer has iAUTO or ART filter.
- same BLH-1 battery (also used in the E-M1X which is very handy if you have that camera as well)
- same HLD-9 optional accessory grip but of course it doesn't have the new toggle
- 580g
- 420 shot CIPA battery life
- $US1799
Firmware updates
- Nov 2020 adds:
- 12bit RAW video
- 'Focus Indicator Display' mode that provides a focus guide, based on phase-detection distance information, when manually focusing
- improved image stabilization performance while shooting video especially during panning
- focus-stacking mode with the new 150-400mm F4.5 TC1.25x IS PRO lens
Reviews
Comparison with the Sony a7RIV
- the Sony a7R IV would seem a crazy camera to compare with the E-M1III, but given the two cameras are very similarly sized and potentially both could be used for travel as well as as many other purposes, I thought it would be interesting to look at the pros and cons of each in direct comparison
pros of the E-M1 III
- almost half the price
- image size is a much more usable and workable 20mp for most scenarios
- the Sony MUST be shot at 61mp when in full frame mode which results in gigantic file sizes which become far larger when post-processing into TIFFs or PSD or similar files to the point that post-processing becomes a chore even on reasonably powerful laptops with 16Gb RAM. Of course, you could re-size these to 20mp TIFFs but these are far larger than 20mp Olympus RAW files as they are 16bit vs 12bit.
- IBIS is significantly better
- weathersealing is almost certainly much more reliable
- rear screen is fully articulating rather than tilt only and is far more functional
- 2×2 switch allows more rapid access to different settings
- telephoto lenses are shorter for the same telephoto reach
- HiRes mode is far more useful:
- 50mp high resolution is probably all that anyone really needs
- HiRes mode can be done hand held
- tripod HiRes mode further improves image quality
- Olympus HiRes will have far less moire than the Sony 61mp normal mode so will be of more benefit in fashion or product photography in particular
- faster sensor readout and less rolling shutter which allows:
- better video quality
- a usable silent electronic shutter mode and burst rates of 18fps with AF and 60fps without AF
- the Sony is stuck with 10fps mechanical if using 12bit compressed RAW, or 6fps mechanical if uncompressed 14bit RAW and neither are silent
- silent electronic shutter to 1/32,000th sec
- better sensor dust mechanism
- Olympus invented this technology and although the Sony has a version of it, the Sony's are renown for collecting dust every time you change the lens.
- a better PASM dial
- the Sony dial's locking feature should have been the same as the Olympus dial and Sony's exposure compensation dial instead, it is a 3 finger job to press down and rotate dial.
- two extra buttons on front of camera
- Pro-Capture mode
- Focus bracketing and in-camera Focus Stacking modes
- night Live Composite mode and Live BULB, Live Time modes
- EYE AF allows selection of closest eye as an option
- in camera focus range limiter that works on any MFT lens
- Starry Sky AF mode
- marginally better menu system
- able to save RAW+jpeg to one card and only RAW to another card
- the Sony only allows RAW to one card and jpeg to the other card
- easier switching of cards in playback
- it is more fun to use and to post-process
pros of the Sony a7RIV
- full frame sensor which offers:
- better high ISO noise performance
- more options for super shallow depth of field (DOF)
- marginally more dynamic range and color depth (although Olympus has more accurate colour science)
- 61mp single shot high resolution images for those who need this resolution - of limited benefit if just posting on the web, and of limited benefit even for printing.
- 24mp APS-C mode - but this requires their best lenses to deliver the 24mp resolution
- mega sized HiRes mode - but this may not be very useful for anyone.
- more PDAF points with better coverage (especially in APS-C mode)
- more reliable AF subject tracking and probably more reliable face/Eye AF tracking
- animal eye AF (albeit only works with a few animals such as dogs and cats)
- much higher resolution EVF
- both SD card slots are UHS-II
photo/olympusomdem1iii.txt · Last modified: 2022/02/20 10:41 by gary1