Olympus M.Zuiko Digital ED 300 mm f/4 IS Pro

Olympus M.Zuiko Digital ED 300 mm f/4 IS Pro
Maker Olympus
Lens mount(s) Micro Four Thirds
Technical data
Type telephoto lens
Focus drive stepper
Focal length 300 mm
Focal length (35mm equiv.) 600 mm
Crop factor 2
Aperture (max/min) f/4.0 / f/22
Close focus distance 1.4 m
Diaphragm blades 7, circular
Construction 17 elements / 10 groups
Features
Ultrasonic motor  Yes
Weather-sealing  Yes
Lens-based stabilization  Yes
Macro capable  Yes
Unique features aspheric
Application distant shots
Physical
Max. length 227 mm
Diameter 92.5 mm
Weight 1270 g
Filter diameter 77 mm
Accessories
Lens hood integrated
History
Introduction 2016

Olympus M.Zuiko Digital ED 300 mm f/4 IS Pro is an optically corrected telephoto lens. With its extreme focal length of 300 millimetres it is the refracting prime lens with the longest focal length of the Micro Four Thirds system (end of 2016).

Description

M.Zuiko Digital lenses are offered as exchangeable lenses for the Micro Four Thirds system (MFT). The ED 300 mm f/4 IS Pro is available since 2016. This lens has a focussing ring, it is water and dust proof and is equipped with an autofocus system. It is the first Olympus M.Zuiko lens and the only Olympus M.Zuiko prime lens with an in-built image stabilisation (end of 2016). Its weight is somewhat above one kilogramme, which allows easy transport and facilitates free-hand shooting.[1]

The lens has six times normal focal length and 17 lenses in 10 groups which give a digonal angle of view of 4.1°.[2] The lens is made of one Super ED (Super Extra-Low Dispersion), three HR (High-Refractive index) and one E-HR (Extra-High Refractive index) elements in order to achieve good image quality and to allow a physically small construction. The ED 300 mm f/4 IS Pro has an excellent image quality with low aberration, low distortion and almost no visible vignetting.[3][4]

Due to the large focal length and its toughness the lens is suitable for wildlife photography and sports photography, but it does not offer zooming such as the Panasonic Leica DG Vario-Elmar 100-400 mm. Olmypus mirrorless system camera bodies have an in-body image stabilisation (IBIS) that can be combined with the lens stabilisation system via the so-called Sync IS mechanism at some models in order to achieve a better stabilising effect. This allows free-hand shots in many situations, and therefore, photographers can get rid of using a tripod.[1]

Comparison

Compared to other camera systems with differing normal focal lengths, and therefore different image sensor sizes, the following equivalent values apply to lenses with appropriate properties as the M.Zuiko 300 mm f/4 within the Micro-Four-Thirds system (MFT). With the parameters given in the table in all camera systems the photographer will get a similar depth of field, diffraction limitation and motion blur:

Image sensor format Focal lengths at the
same angle of view
( diagonal angle ≈ 4°)
F-number at the
same depth of field
ISO speed at the
same exposure time
Nikon CX 200 mm 2.8 100
MFT 300 mm 4.0 200
APS-C 400 mm 5.6 360
Full frame 600 mm 8.0 800

External links

References

  1. 1 2 Olympus M.Zuiko Digital ED 300mm f/4.0 IS Pro lens, photoreview.com.au, January 2016, retrieved 14. November 2016
  2. ED 300mm f4.0 IS Pro instruction manual, olympus.eu, retrieved 14. November 2016
  3. Szymon Starczewski: Lens Review - Olympus M.Zuiko Digital 300 mm f/4.0 ED IS PRO, lenstip.com, 30 June 2016, retrieved 14. November 2016
  4. William Brawley: Olympus 300mm f/4.0 IS Pro ED M.Zuiko Digital, imaging-resource.com, 5 January 2016, retrieved 14. November 2016
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