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New Interview Confirms Olympus will NOT go Full Frame

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In a recent interview at Imaging Resource with Aki Murata (Vice President Sales and Marketing) from Olympus confirmed that the Olympus has no plans to develop a full-frame camera.

As is known, the Olympus E-M1X camera is on the horizon and to be announce in early 2019. The first images and features list for the OM-D E-M1X has already leaked. The size of the body that emerged in the leaked images, people had asked questions, Olympus would prefer Full Frame sensor instead of  Micro Four Thirds in this model.

In this new interview Olympus re-confirms that they will NOT go Full Frame. Here is the recap from the interview.

New Interview Confirms Olympus will NOT go Full Frame

From Imaging Resource  :

Olympus’ natural market is in the outdoor/moving-subject

Having a compact, lightweight, rugged system is seriously important for Nature and Wildlife photographers, and the smaller sensor size of Micro Four Thirds is a significant advantage. The difference between carrying a full-frame DSLR with a 600mm f/4 lens vs a Micro Four Thirds body and Olympus’ excellent 300mm f/4 (600mm eq.) is enormous. (And yes, hopefully heading off some of the flaming comments below, I know that the DOF of a 300mm f/4 on a Micro Four Thirds body is going to be greater than that of a 600mm f/4 on a full-frame body. When it comes to exposure though, f/4 is f/4, so the Olympus 300mm will give you the same shutter speeds as a 600mm f/4 on a full-frame body.)

While it seems that almost everyone else in the business is chasing after full-frame mirrorless (Fujifilm and Ricoh excepted) Murata-san made the point that those other players are in the process of leaving behind an important and very significant segment, namely people for whom compactness, light weight and ruggedness are supremely important.

While modern full-frame camera bodies can be quite compact, the lenses that go along with them are a lot larger than their Micro Four Thirds counterparts, especially as you get to telephoto focal lengths. All else being equal, a bag full of full-frame lenses is going to be a lot bigger and heavier than one packed with the Micro Four Thirds alternatives.

Rather than being concerned that they can’t compete in a world dominated by full-frame camera systems, Olympus is rejoicing that the competition has left them with a huge market segment virtually all to themselves.

Stay tuned with us for more information. Read more Olympus Mirrorless news and Olympus Rumors.

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