gianstam
Senior Member
Can you please share your experience? I have the opportunity to grab it paired with 14-140 for 500 euros.
Thank you
From DPR review
Review: Panasonic Lumix DMC-GX85 impresses with image quality, versatility: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com) (Performace section)
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However, one major area the GX85 falls flat in terms of performance is its electronic viewfinder. This field-sequential LCD panel is simply put, not very good. Keep in mind, it is the same panel from the GX7, which debuted back in 2013. Three years ago, this EVF may have cut it, but having used cameras like the GX8 and Olympus PEN-F, which use much more modern, higher magnification OLED panels, the GX85's feels dated.
Because colors channels refresh one at a time, panning or zooming with your eye to the finder can result in color tearing. And when using the EVF while the camera is set to continuous AF, the rapid lens hunting combined with color tearing is a recipe for a headache. Adding to the EVF woes, Panasonic gave the panel a 16:9 aspect ratio (presumably to cater to video shooters). But when shooting in the sensor's native aspect ratio of 4:3, the scene viewed through the EVF is quite small. Simply put, I found little to like about the GX85's 2.76M-dot field sequential EVF.
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Thank you
From DPR review
Review: Panasonic Lumix DMC-GX85 impresses with image quality, versatility: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com) (Performace section)
"
However, one major area the GX85 falls flat in terms of performance is its electronic viewfinder. This field-sequential LCD panel is simply put, not very good. Keep in mind, it is the same panel from the GX7, which debuted back in 2013. Three years ago, this EVF may have cut it, but having used cameras like the GX8 and Olympus PEN-F, which use much more modern, higher magnification OLED panels, the GX85's feels dated.
Because colors channels refresh one at a time, panning or zooming with your eye to the finder can result in color tearing. And when using the EVF while the camera is set to continuous AF, the rapid lens hunting combined with color tearing is a recipe for a headache. Adding to the EVF woes, Panasonic gave the panel a 16:9 aspect ratio (presumably to cater to video shooters). But when shooting in the sensor's native aspect ratio of 4:3, the scene viewed through the EVF is quite small. Simply put, I found little to like about the GX85's 2.76M-dot field sequential EVF.
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