Panasonic Leica DG Vario-Elmar 100-400 mm explained

Panasonic Leica DG Vario-Elmar 100-400 mm F4,0–6,3 Asph. / Power O.I.S.
Maker:Panasonic
Mount:Micro Four Thirds
Focusdrive:stepper
Feat-Usm:y
Feat-Is:y
Feat-Ws:y
Feat-Macro:y
Feat-Special:aspheric / dual image stabilisation
Application:wildlife / sports
Type:tele zoom
Flength:100-400 mm
Flength-Eq:200-800 mm
Fov:2
Aperture:4.0-6.3 / 22
Groups:13
Elements:20
Diaphragm:9, circular
Close-Dist:1.3 m
Max-Mag:0.25
Weight:985 g
Max-Diameter:83 mm
Min-Length:171.5 mm
Filter:72 mm
Hood:included
Case:included
Start:2016

The Panasonic Leica DG Vario-Elmar 100–400 mm 4.0-6.3 lens is a digital compact telephoto zoom lens for Micro Four Thirds system cameras. It is a varifocal lens branded with the German label Leica, but is currently manufactured in China by Panasonic, previously Japan.

Description

It is the autofocus lens with the smallest field of view of the Micro Four Thirds (MFT) system (end of 2016). Its weight is less than one kilogramme, which allows easy transport and facilitates free-hand shooting.[1]

Its in-lens image stabilisation can be combined with in-camera-body image stabilisation in order to allow shots without a tripod, despite the very small field of view (between 12° and 3.1°). Even at maximum focal length it is possible to get sharp images taken free-hand with exposure times down to a tenth of a second. The lens's focusing is fast and precise even in low light conditions such as when photographing wildlife around dusk.[2] Lens and camera body can communicate with a sample rate up to 240 images per second.[3]

There is almost no distortion visible in shots taken at any focal length.[4]

Due to its narrow field of view and its relatively short close focus distance, it can also be used for macro shots from a distance of 1.3 metres or above.

The silent autofocus and the stepless aperture adjustment together with the high optical quality enable 4K resolution video shooting with this lens.

The lens has a small shiftable in-built lens hood and another bigger lens hood which can be attached to it and fixed via a thumb screw. Some critics have complained that there is no bayonet, which would allow faster attachment and detachment of the lens hood.[5] However, under extreme backlight conditions the images of the telephoto lens can suffer from lens flare.[6]

Due to the smaller image sensor size of the MFT system the depth of field is larger compared to full-frame sensor cameras if the lenses are operated at the same f-number.

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 Leica DG 100–400 mm 6.3 in the MFT system. With the parameters given in the table in all camera systems the photographer will get the same angle of view, depth of field, diffraction limitation and motion blur:

Image sensor formatFocal lengths at the
same angle of view
(diagonal angle ≈ 3°)
F-number at the
same depth of field
ISO speed at the
same exposure time
300 mm 4.5 100
MFT 400 mm 6.3 200
530 mm 8.4 360
800 mm 12.6 800

External links

References

  1. https://www.test.de/Telezoom-von-Panasonic-Objektiv-fuer-Vielflieger-und-Vogelfreunde-5030446-0/ Telezoom von Panasonic: Objektiv für Vielflieger und Vogelfreunde
  2. Gordon Laing: Leica DG 100-400mm f4-6.3 review, cameralabs.com, September 2016, retrieved 12 November 2016
  3. Richard Wong: PANASONIC LEICA DG VARIO-ELMAR 100-400 F/4-6.3 REVIEW, photobyrichard.com, 2 April 2016, retrieved 12 November 2016
  4. Andrew Alexander: Panasonic 100-400mm f/4-6.3 ASPH POWER OIS LEICA DG, imaging-resource.com, 22 June 2016, retrieved 12 November 2016
  5. Jordan Steele: Review: Panasonic Leica 100-400mm f/4-6.3 DG Vario-Elmar OIS, admiringlight.com, 12 June 2016, retrieved 12 November 2016
  6. Szymon Starczewski: Panasonic Leica DG Vario-Elmar 100-400 mm f/4.0-6.3 ASPH. POWER O.I.S. - 9. Ghosting and flares, lenstip.com, 12 June 2016, retrieved 12 November 2016