Canon r50 or Olympus E-M10 IV?

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Messages
2
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Location
Belgium
# of dives
100 - 199
Hi

I'm looking to upgrade my Olympus tg5 since I want better image quality.
I was leaning towards the Olympus E-M10 IV with AOI housing, but I've found a second hand canon R50 with Nauticam pro housing in the same price range.
I've been mainly shooting macro but also the occasional wide angle.
Now I would like to have some advice which camera is better at the moment since I can't find much info on de canon r50.
 
Search under Canon R50 and Nauticam housing and you should find many posts by me and few others.

The Canon R50 Nauticam will require you sue wet bayonet lenses for wide angle and closer macro but is a dream to dive and shoot.

Good luck!

David Haas
 
Search under Canon R50 and Nauticam housing and you should find many posts by me and few others.

The Canon R50 Nauticam will require you sue wet bayonet lenses for wide angle and closer macro but is a dream to dive and shoot.

Good luck!

David Haas
Thanks for the fast response, I've read all posts so far on this forum about the R50. The wet lenses aren't a deal breaker for me, I just have my doubts about the macro capabilities (since I haven't seen any macro photo's).
 
I've been going through the same decision process and came up with a list of pros for each of the cameras:

R50:
  • Phase-detect autofocus (the EM10IV is contrast detect) which is the superior variant. Likely most noticeable in lower light situations and might reduce the need for a focus light
  • Larger sensor (APS-C vs micro 4/3) in a very similar body size.
  • Nauticam housing has a deeper depth rating (100m vs 40m)
EM10IV:
  • Housing is roughly 1lb lighter and smaller
  • Interchangeable air lenses (R50 is wet lens only)
  • Dedicated exposure controls (R50 has one dial and buttons to change it's function)
  • Standard M67 port works with most accessories (the Nauticam R50 housing has a bayonet mount and requires M67 -> bayonet adapters for most attachments)
With the OM setup, if you wanted to use dedicated air macro lenses you'll also need to buy additional ports which will add to the cost, size, and weight. If instead you went with wet lenses the two systems have pretty similar kit lenses and the wet lens options are the same.

Multiple people have told me to buy a nauticam housing as a "buy once cry once" type of purchase. So if you can get a nauticam housing and a comparable (arguably better?) camera for the same price that would be my choice.
 
I will add owning a Canon R50 and also cheaper Canon R100 the CMOS DPAF focusing capability on these cheap offerings is astounding. And that's coming from a person who shot plenty of dSLR and compact cameras with contrast focus for years.

Just one old guy's option :)

David Haas

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