Olympus E-520: Update to a Top Seller
by Wesley Fink on August 26, 2008 3:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Digital Camera
Olympus E-520 vs. Canon XS and XSi
All crops are 150x250 pixels, and images were captured at f4, manually focused, on a tripod at the same position. Color balance in all cases was manually set to tungsten as all images were illuminated with a single tungsten 100W bulb high to the right side of the image. The XSi at 12.2MP represents a smaller area at the same pixel resolution as the 10.1MP E-520 and XS. The full-size images, which you can see by clicking on any crop, represent the same field of view regardless of the resolution.
It should be apparent that despite the XSi's 20% increase in resolution image noise is all but the same at ISO speeds to 800. At ISO 1600 the XSi does exhibit slightly more noise than the Canon XS but results remain very similar. In total, this performance is certainly good news for those considering the purchase of the XSi or XS or E-520. Performance of the XS and XSi are remarkably similar, and the improvement in the performance of the E-520 compared to the earlier model makes it much more competitive with the XS than we saw in results from the earlier Olympus entry DSLRs.
One of the more interesting aspects of this comparison is the different color philosophies between Canon and Olympus. All three cameras were set for tungsten white balance, but to our eyes the Olympus E-520 results are much more accurate. Canon continues to spec their tungsten preset at a higher Kelvin temperature more commonly seen in tungsten studio lights, which are a higher temperature than tungsten home lighting. You will need to keep this in mind when shooting indoors without flash with a Canon DSLR. The results are even "warmer" under tungsten when the Canon is set to Auto White Balance.
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melgross - Thursday, August 28, 2008 - link
Better than any of THEIR previous models. That doesn't make it a best seller.araczynski - Tuesday, August 26, 2008 - link
i'll need to come back here to read up on this again when i'm in the market for a new slr in the next year, hopefully this isn't all old news by then.