February 12, 2010

Olympus EC14 1.4x Teleconverter Lens for at f/2.8

31eCaIXqL2L. SL160  Olympus EC14 1.4x Teleconverter Lens for at f/2.8
Brand: Olympus
Average Rating
17 reviews

When you need more telephoto in a smaller package, the EC14 1.4x Teleconverter is an ideal choice. With only 1 stop of light loss the 1.4x converter still provides a fast super telephoto for sports and nature photography. Turn your Zuiko Digital 300mm f2.8 into a 420mm f4.0 (35mm equivalent 840mm f4.0). The EC14 is compatible with the Zuiko Digital 14-54mm f2.8/3.5, 50-200mm f2.8/3.5, 300mm f2.8, and 50mm f2.0 (f2.8 and up) lenses and is fully multi-coated to retain the high lens performance you expect. An inexpensive solution for professional-level results. more info

moreinfo Olympus EC14 1.4x Teleconverter Lens for at f/2.8

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Comments on Olympus EC14 1.4x Teleconverter Lens for at f/2.8 »

February 5, 2010

Charles Hussey @ 9:47 am

Better than expected
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
Teleconverters I have purchased in the past (much cheaper) degraded the image to the point they were almost useless. I expected some image degradation and was surprised that the image was everybit as sharp as those taken by my 50-200 lens by itself. Well worth the price.

February 15, 2010

M. Barry @ 3:46 pm

Olympus EC14 1.4x teleconverter
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I have taken about 500 shots with the EC14 1.4 paired with the Zuiko 50mm – 200mm zoom lens on my Olunpus Evolt E-500 DSLR and am quite pleased with the results to date. I have experienced no problems with operation of the lens or image quality. Images are bright and crisp. The 40% zoom gain really helps to fill the frame when shooting wildlife without having to move in so close as to disturb them.

February 28, 2010

Robert B. Taylor @ 2:11 am

Teleconverter
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
High quality lens extension. Saves space & weight in the camera bag for the few times when an extra-long lens is required.

March 16, 2010

ManuT @ 4:09 am

good but can make other choices
Rating:4 out of 5 stars
I have 14-54, 50-200 and then I took this one to have the reach upto 280 mm. I was confused weather to take this or have the 135-400 mm from sigma fro $589. The reason of doing this was having less weight while travelling with a slighter less reach.

I did not find much difference in 200 to 280 mm reach while trying this. I could have taken the photo with 200 and cropped it a little bit and would have done the job too. Your milage may vary.

I suggest taking the 135-400 if it is only for the 80 mm more reach, its not that much of a difference in price.

Thanks

March 24, 2010

K. Thompson @ 2:19 am

Added capability
Rating:4 out of 5 stars
Olympus EC14 1.4x Teleconverter Lens (for at f/2.8 on E-System lenses)

I bought to expand the range for my bird photography, it does the job very well.

March 31, 2010

Marvin R. Doering @ 3:19 pm

Phenominal Adapter
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I leave this coupled to my 50-200 and I can take macro like photos from 15 feet away.

April 11, 2010

William D. Walling @ 10:20 pm

Great enhancement
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
Works great— I use the EC14 1.4x Teleconverter Lens with my 18-180 mm

zoom and it hooks up in a snap for great close up shots–well worth the money

April 16, 2010

Gustavo Guinand @ 11:43 am

Exelent Olympus
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I use the teleconverter with a E-410 and work incredible, My tendency in to use less weight in camera’s as the e-410 and the EC14 is the perfect companion Olympus 50mm f/2.0 Telephoto Macro ED Lens for E1, E300 & E500 Digital SLR CamerasOlympus 40-150mm f/3.5-4.5 Zuiko Digital Zoom Lens for E1, E300 & E500 Cameras

April 17, 2010

Margo Reasner @ 5:00 pm

Additional Info…
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I called Olympus and confirmed that this will work with their 18-180mm lens. I bought it and tried the two together and it is working great!! First photo took a while for everything to communicate with each other and since then it works like just having the 18-180mm lens alone on. And it’s wonderful having that extra bit of zoom…

May 7, 2010

Rag's @ 8:11 pm

Olympus EC14 1.4x excellent.
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
This product is extremely well made and very easy to use. There is no reduction in picture quality when used with the olympus zoom or tele lenses.

Amazing quality. Worth the price.

May 10, 2010

ubat @ 3:59 am

Works great with the 70-300mm lens
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I wanted the EC14 1.4x teleconverter primarily to extend the range of my 70-300 mm lens for bird photography. I’d read all the reviews, critiques and forums beforehand, asked for advice and practical tips and knew what I was getting myself into: more zoom, one stop less of light, meaning 840 mm reach (the four thirds system used by Olympus automatically doubles the range of any lens because of sensor peculiarities) and f/8.0 with the lens fully extended.

There’s no denying I had my qualms before closing the deal. For that price I could get a decent shorter lens instead, or save up towards another zoom lens. But what sold me on the EC14 was the prospect of getting closer to the birds without lugging a ton of equipment around. So I bought it…

…And waited for a week before a bright, sunny day came along. I attached it to the E-520 and the 70-300 mm (it couldn’t be easier and more fool-proof) and set out to test it. The results were beyond my expectations. I got sharp, bright, close photos of birds and anything else at which I pointed my camera, the lens behaved exactly as it usually does, focus was as good as it is without the teleconverter and f/8.0 was just fine for the light conditions. In fact, the photo geeks always say that the 70-300 mm’s “sweet spot” — the setup in which this lens will produce its sharpest images — is exactly f/8.0, and now I have to agree with them (at 300 mm I always used this lens at its minimum aperture, 5.6, to get faster shutter speeds).

I am really, really happy with the EC14, and having this range with a setup that is still light and easy to carry around the whole day is a dream come true.

May 25, 2010

Stanley Andrews @ 9:07 am

EC14 1.4x Teleconverter
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
The converter has done everything it is suppose to do. On the 40-150mm lens it can make a substancial difference in field of view. Which is important with nature and portrait work. However, it did make a difference in the camera’s overall weight.

June 13, 2010

Gerald Siegel @ 5:44 pm

A well designed teleconverter that could go on the Hubble,it is that slick
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I hesitated this purchase,because I dislike converters in general. Olympus has scored a winner in this one by cramming 6 elements into a disk that is less than one inch in depth and which mates with a water resistant seal to the better Zuiko ED lenses. I am using it almost exclusively with the 50mm f 2 (actually usable only to f 2.8 value for technical reasons). Reason: It adds some closeup capability by keeping the close focus distance of the prime and upping the magnification factor. For portrait use too,it keeps a bright finder image and gives the DOF of an equivalent 70mm lens (blurs backgrounds more, a problem with a true 50mm for some). I can see no barrel distortion w/ the prime lens. With the 14-54 the viewfinder gets a little dark,but not too much so. Conclusion: It takes a good prime and makes it an even better or at least more versatile prime. Shooting through a total of 16 or so glass elements becomes a triumph of good coating and optical alignment. Not inexpensive,but a handy gadget that I will use with future telephoto Zuikos to add that leetle beet extra…PS.I will never use the case,preferring Zing neoprene lens bags to hard or ultra soft cases…

July 11, 2010

J. Mohler @ 12:01 am

A worthy addition to your lens collection
Rating:4 out of 5 stars
It naturally belongs with the 50-200mm lens.

The parts that impress me:

This thing is really compact. I have a hard time imaging anyone not have enough space for it.

The camera automically calculates the change in focal lenth. All the EXIF information is correct. A 50 – 200 becomes a 71 – 283.

It is way cheaper than a 90-250mm

Even with the converter in place, the camera, converter, and lens feel like one solid unit.

The parts I don’t like:

With the 50-200mm lens, you can lock the tripod to either the camera or the lens (via the supplied ring). With the converter neither option works well PLUS since you now have more zoom, you need a more steady foundation

The 50-200mm is a top quality lens. With the converter (and lots of light), the quality is just average. You are NOT going to want it attached all the time.

While you can use it at f3.5, you really need to use it at 6 or higher.

~~~~~~~~~~

Bottom line: While it is a value leader, it performs as expect and gets an impressive reach out of the already impressive 50-200mm lens

July 21, 2010

A. Barth @ 2:10 am

EC14 1.4x teleconverter
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I am using this with my Olympus 510 and so far have been very happy with it. I have used this on both kit lenses with great sucess on both telephoto shots as well as macro shots. All pictures come out very clear.

HMMWV @ 2:25 pm

Do the numbers first then buy it
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I guess you sum up teleconverters as a way to get a little more out of your lens(es), but at a price. Olympus has not kept up on their “compatibility list” for this – it turns out it works on alot of lenses that are not on the “compatibility list” – even other (sigma) brands. So the five stars are for its compatibility in the system.

Before you buy it – look at all your options. I did finally buy it but first I looked at a “better” lens. They were all slower than my existing 50-200mm + 1 stop. It ends up being a 283 mm lens with the OLY teleconverter, so it was the best solution overall. It’s not exactly 1.4 but pretty close

I did not like loosing the 1 stop, and I did notice the darker image in the viewfinder as the 1 stop loss is not removed while focusing like any dialed in stops are, but that’s the real price you pay – you are just more aware of it. I use the converter on about 10% of my shooting with the 50-200 lens when I am outside and have a tripod or inside with a GN 50 flash. Remember it magnifies your movement too so a good tripod helps with the extra weight.

A last couple of notes – keep in mind your photo size is 4 x 5.33″ and not 4×6 so be sure to zoom out just a bit and leave a boarder for post processing into 4×6 standard prints. Having the extra zoom tends to make you want to fill the frame but then you must cut something later. Your camera’s weight and balance will change too. Pick a decent tripod that can handle the combined weight of your lens, body, teleconverter, along with flash and extra power systems. A flimsy tripod will show in your 1:1 pixel reviews of your shots. Finally, the 1.2 x magnifier for the eyepiece seems to work really well with this in your optics line to aid in focusing with the extra 1 stop you can not take out of your lens.

This is a quality product from Olympus and extends your flexibility on many lenses, but at a price. If you own a “favorite” lens, this is probably a great add-on but ask around about compatibility first as new lenses are showing up all the time.

July 24, 2010

Edward J. Macaluso @ 11:48 pm

I LIKE IT!!
Rating:5 out of 5 stars
I brought this for the 12 Hours at Sebring auto race and it worked Great!! Sooooooooo much better pictutes than last years at Sebring.

I like it!! No problem what so ever with it, fit perfect on the camera.

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