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Panasonic Lumix DMC-G2 review

in Digital cameras

Verdict

A highly capable camera with a touchscreen and superb EVF, but image quality and build are a tad disappointing

Review Date: 30 Jul 2010

Reviewed By: Jonathan Bray

Price when reviewed: £430 (£505 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
5 stars out of 6

Features & Design
5 stars out of 6

Value for Money
5 stars out of 6

Performance
4 stars out of 6

Image Quality
4 stars out of 6

The trickle of intermediate SLD (single lens direct view) cameras of last year has turned into a torrent this year, with several new models from Samsung, Sony and Olympus hitting the market. Panasonic’s gambit this year comprises two Micro Four Thirds cameras: the Lumix DMC-G10, which we’ve already reviewed, and this, the pricier and more fully featured Lumix DMC-G2.

To look at, the G2 isn’t much of a departure from its more affordable cousin. It looks like a more compact version of a DSLR, a feat it achieves (as all SLD cameras do) by shrinking the distance between lens and sensor, and removing the optical viewfinder. The body is clad in the same disappointingly cheap-feeling resin plastic, and it’s all but identical in appearance.

Under the hood, it uses the same 12.1-megapixel 4/3in sensor, and many of the rest of the specifications and capabilities are the same too, including the 14-42mm f/3.5-5.6 kit lens, and pop up GN11 flash.

Look closer, however, and critical differences do begin to appear, the first being that the electronic viewfinder is far superior. Where the G10’s EVF sported a lowly 202k resolution, the one in the G2 is seven times the resolution at 1,440k, and it makes focusing and framing shots in bright conditions much, much easier.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-G2

We’d go so far as to say it’s the best EVF we’ve used in a camera of its type, and it’s also improved by the addition of a sensor to the right, which turns it on when you lift the camera to your eye and switches it off when you look away.

If you prefer to use the screen, you’ll find enhancements there too, although not as dramatic. The G10’s screen is actually the same resolution as the G2’s – a bright, usable 460kpixels – but it’s fully articulated just like the original Lumix DMC-G1

More interesting than this is that Panasonic has also added touch capability. This enables some useful features, such as touch focus with subject tracking, and certain less essential ones, such as gesture navigation in playback and a touch-activated shutter.

Investigating the exterior of the camera reveals a couple of refinements to the build, the G10 adding a dedicated movie button on top, just behind the shutter button, and an autofocus area dial on the left, mounted atop the focus mode dial. The lens mount on the G10 is metal rather than the plastic mount found on the G2.

Finally, video options are more sophisticated. The G2 is able to shoot at 720p/50 in AVCHD Lite format (for up to 100 minutes), whereas the G2 is limited to Motion JPEG. There’s also an input for a stereo microphone, allowing you to improve on the mono audio from the integrated mic.

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User comments

G2 or G10

Whilst the review is detailed as always you really do need to check the content of the blog before you release it.

Is it a G2 or a G10, as your comments seemed confused especially about lens mount and video.

However the camera is good but is still not an alternative to a Digital SLR camera with a full sized sensor if image quality in larger prints is your objective. Like it's predecessor the G1 it does provide a lighter alternative to the traditional DSLR at a reasonable price and does deliver good quality photos.

By djt1st on 5 Aug 2010

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