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Esk -- the "mini-macro" was my tongue-in-cheek way of saying -- zoomed out to 50mm and get as close as one could -- about 15 cm? for minimum focus. I'm guessing it would be very similar to the 14-42mm lens at 42mm -- which is often "good enough" for what I do.
Still playing around with stuff and trying to figure out a way to have my cake and eat it too.
Will someone please figure out a hack to allow a "function button" to trigger the "macro" switch?
I just took the 60mm macro focusing gear route. The 60mm macro seems to be around 3mm thinner than the 12-50. That's an awfull lot of butyl rubber to remove from the inside of the gear tube. You can't mill or use a lathe on the rubber. You need to sand it away.
Then you have the problem with those buttons, they are really in the way.
And as you remove all that rubber, it gets too soft, the gear teeth bend away. So you need to glue in some strenghtening hard plastic..
All the on and off testing on the lens is mechanically tough to the lens.
I succeeded getting a useable gear after a lot of work, but my lens is less pretty now. I don't recommend that route.
IF you should DIY the gear to save some money, I'd suggest making an extension to your 14-42 gear.
About the flip diopter - for the olympus you need that size converter from giant click-on to M67. It is really annoying to bring under water. It is a large thing to stuff away somewhere. I don't know a flip-up to mount directly on the olympus house, and you can't do wide through the size converter.
If there was a community that hacked the olympus software, they could probably make your hack. But I don't believe there is. Extracting the software and understanding it would take months for someone capable.