Furnari
Contributor
Like many people who tried the 9-18, I was never really happy with it underwater due to lousy corner performance in the small dome. In fact, I haven't dove with it since I started shooting the 12-40. The Pro lens works pretty well in the flat port, but as you can imagine a dome would be a lot nicer for dedicated wide angle dives. Unfortunately, in what is surely a surprise to many underwater photographers, domes are expensive. I'm cheap, so I ended up with the Inon dome intended for the Four Thirds e-volt cameras and 7-14 lens (the Oly PPO-E04 was designed for the same combination). This dome is currently listed on Divervision for $575. It took over a month to get it, so who knows if it's still available. If it is, it's probably the cheapest option for an OMD 170mm dome, and not a whole lot more than the flat port. It does need the Oly 2" port extension ring to work, so factor that into your budget as they can be spendy if you don't have one or can't find one on e-bay. You may already have the OMD port adapter, but I splurged and bought a second one for convenience. As I hadn't found anything online about this combination, I figured I'd be the guinea pig and report back; I'm also going to use it on an upcoming trip to the San Juan Islands so we'll see how it does in the real world.
I tested the combination in a tub yesterday, and corner performance is a lot better than the flat port, and significantly better than the 9-18 in the Zen dome. The test shots aren't the greatest, but they were enough for proof of concept. All three are compressed jpegs at 12mm- strobe positioning was a bit of a pain in the tub, so the exposure isn't perfect. The first shot is at the closest focusing distance I could get (F4.5), the second is probably a foot away (also F4.5), and the third is the same distance at F2.8. The lower left corner seems a little blurrier than the upper right on the two further shots, but if I had to guess I'd say it's because I wasn't holding the rig level. I also note a little more vignetting with the F2.8 shot, but it's not enough to hurt my feelings. 40mm performance was still sharp, so it'll work nicely for fish portraits and the like. I also tested the 60mm macro in the dome, and it works just fine. I didn't have the time or inclination to test it, but my guess is that the 9-18 will work in the dome if it's mounted with a 1" extension.
I tested the combination in a tub yesterday, and corner performance is a lot better than the flat port, and significantly better than the 9-18 in the Zen dome. The test shots aren't the greatest, but they were enough for proof of concept. All three are compressed jpegs at 12mm- strobe positioning was a bit of a pain in the tub, so the exposure isn't perfect. The first shot is at the closest focusing distance I could get (F4.5), the second is probably a foot away (also F4.5), and the third is the same distance at F2.8. The lower left corner seems a little blurrier than the upper right on the two further shots, but if I had to guess I'd say it's because I wasn't holding the rig level. I also note a little more vignetting with the F2.8 shot, but it's not enough to hurt my feelings. 40mm performance was still sharp, so it'll work nicely for fish portraits and the like. I also tested the 60mm macro in the dome, and it works just fine. I didn't have the time or inclination to test it, but my guess is that the 9-18 will work in the dome if it's mounted with a 1" extension.