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The Panasonic Lumix DC-G9 is a Micro Four Thirds mirrorless interchangeable lens camera body announced by Panasonic at the end of 2017. [1]The Panasonic G9 is a more still-centric variant of the Panasonic Lumix DC-GH5: it can shoot up to 20 pictures per second in full resolution and with continuous focusing, interruption-free live view as well as raw recording.
The Panasonic Lumix DC-GX850/GX800 (also known as the GF9 [2] in some regions) is an interchangeable lens [3] mirrorless system digital camera announced by Panasonic on January 4, 2017. [4] It uses the same 16MP Four Thirds sensor as several of its siblings. [5] It is sold with a 12-32mm collapsible f/3.5-5.6 ASPH.
The Micro Four Thirds system (MFT) of still and video cameras and lenses was released by Olympus and Panasonic in 2008; lenses built for MFT use a flange focal distance of 19.25 mm, covering an image sensor with dimensions 17.3 × 13.0 mm (21.6 mm diagonal).
Panasonic Lumix DC-G9: contains a 20.3 Mpixel sensor. The High Resolution Mode takes a sequence of 8 shots in quick succession between which the sensor is shifted by 0.5 pixel [14] for each image. These are subsequently merged into an 80 Mpixel image. [15] Panasonic Lumix DC-S1: contains a 24.2 Mpixel sensor.
The Panasonic Lumix DC-GH5M2, known as Lumix GH5II, is a mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera with a Micro Four Thirds mount, released by Panasonic on 25 June 2021. DC-GH5M2 evolved the video recording function that was very popular with the DC-GH5 and resolved issues such as autofocus and live streaming.
The G10 is supplied with a standard Panasonic 14–42 mm ƒ/3.5–5.6 kit lens (28–84 mm equivalent) and can use all native Micro Four Thirds System lenses. Four Thirds System lenses can be used with an adapter, as can the lenses from nearly every major manual focus camera mount, such as Leica M , Leica R , Olympus OM , Nikon F , Canon FD ...
The Panasonic Lumix DMC-G85/G80 (DMC-G81 in Germany) is a mid-level DSLR-styled Micro Four Thirds mirrorless camera announced on September 19, 2016. The follow-up to the Panasonic Lumix DMC-G7, its main improvements are a weather-sealed body, an upgraded electronic viewfinder, no recording limit (Only G85, USA version) and the addition of 5-axis in-body image stabilization which works together ...
The G5 is the successor to the Panasonic Lumix DMC-G3 and is Panasonic's most junior MFT camera. The G5 differs from the G3 principally by offering a higher maximum ISO (12,800 vs 6,400), a continuous shooting frame rate (6 vs 4 fps), a higher resolution screen, and a new image sensor and processor.