Amateur Photographer

OM System OM-1 Mark II

At a glance

£2,199 body only

● 20MP Four Thirds Stacked BSI sensor
● Up to 120fps continuous shooting
● ISO 80-102,400 (extended)
● 1,053-point AI detect Quad Pixel AF
● 5.76m-dot, 0.83x electronic viewfinder
● 3-in, 1.6m-dot vari-angle touchscreen
● 5-axis in-body image stabilisation

The new OM System OM-1 Mark II is the firm’s latest flagship camera, updating the original OM-1. With high-speed continuous shooting, a weather-sealed body and new computational features, is this the most advanced and best ‘Olympus’ camera ever made?

At first glance, the OM System OM-1 Mark II doesn’t look very different to the original OM-1. However, there are a number of updates to be found, including rubber-coated command dials to aid with handling.

Features

It only seems like yesterday that the OM-1 was first announced, but it’s actually been nearly two years. If you know all about the OM-1 already, then much of this new model will be familiar, so let’s start with the changes introduced in the Mark II.

New features include the world’s first Live Graduated ND filter, which is built into the camera. The LiveND filter has also been improved with an added stop, making 7 stops in total. In addition, high-resolution multi-shot mode now supports 14-bit raw shooting.

For fans of continuous shooting the buffer is now double the size, allowing for up to 213 raw shots at 120 frames per second, and up to 256 raws when shooting at 50fps with continuous AF. The AF system has also been improved with better tracking as well as better AF during video. Subject detection was already quite impressive with cars, planes, trains, birds, and dogs and cats covered, but now human detection has been added.

There are a number of other improvements, including in-body image stabilisation (IBIS) which now can compensate for up to 8.5 steps. The command dials have been improved, with a rubber coating to aid grip, and the blackout-free continuous shooting

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