Panasonic Lumix G 14mm lens

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Lumix 14mm
MakerPanasonic
Technical data
Focal length14mm
Focal length (35mm equiv.)28mm
Aperture (max/min)f/2.5
Close focus distance0.18 m (7.1 in)
Max. magnification0.10
Construction6 elements in 5 groups
Features
Lens-based stabilizationNo No
Macro capableNo No
Physical
Max. length20.5 mm (.81 in)
Diameter55 mm (2.19 in)
Weight55g (1.9 oz)
Filter diameter46mm
Angle of view
Diagonal75 deg.

The Panasonic Lumix G 14mm f/2.5 lens is a pancake-style prime lens for Micro Four Thirds system cameras. In the Micro Four Thirds format, it is moderately wide. As of its late-2010 release, it is claimed by Panasonic to be the lightest interchangeable digital-camera lens. It is the prime-lens option available with the Panasonic GF2 and GF3, and available separately.

Focusing is claimed to be suitable for video ("MSC"- movie and stills compatible), with a fast, quiet autofocus motor. The lens is "focus by wire"- the focusing ring sends commands, while the actual actuation is via a motor, even for manual focus. Focusing is internal- the front lens element does not rotate, allowing the consistent use of polarized filters. The 46mm thread lets a Micro Four Thirds user share filters between it, the Panasonic 20mm, Panasonic Leica 25mm, Panasonic Leica 45mm lenses, and the Olympus M.Zuiko Digital ED 12mm f/2.

The lens has received good reviews.[1][2][3][4][5] Reviewers liked the sharpness despite a very small size (perhaps even too small),[6][7] and "silent, high speed" focusing.[8] Criticism includes occasional vignetting, and some chromatic aberration. Some reviewers criticized software correction for distortion.[7]

External links

References

  1. ^ "EOSHD review".
  2. ^ "Imaging Resource page".
  3. ^ "DSLRphoto roundup".
  4. ^ "SLRGear review".
  5. ^ "Steve Huff's review".
  6. ^ "Soundimageplus blog".
  7. ^ a b "Lenstip review".
  8. ^ "Photographyblog review".