Olympus E-400

Olympus E-400
Overview
TypeDigital single-lens reflex
Lens
LensInterchangeable Four Thirds mount
Sensor/medium
Sensor17.3 x 13.0 mm Four Thirds System Kodak KAI-10100 RGB CCD sensor
2x FOV crop
Maximum resolution3648 x 2736 (10 effective Megapixels)
Film speedISO 100–1600 in 1/3 steps
Noise warning for > ISO 800
Storage mediaCompact Flash (Type I and II), xD Picture card
Focusing
Focus modesSingle AF ( S-AF )
Continuous AF ( C-AF )
Manual Focus ( MF )
S-AF + MF
C-AF + MF
Focus areas3 points TTL Phase Diff
Exposure/metering
Exposure modesAuto
Program automatic
Aperture priority
Shutter priority
Manual
Scene modes
Exposure meteringTTL open-aperture
49-zone multi-pattern
Range: 1 to 20 EV (50 mm F2, ISO 100)
Metering modesDigital ESP
Centre weighted
Spot
Highlight based Spot
Shadow based Spot
Flash
FlashBuilt in Pop-up, Guide number 10 m at ISO 100, hotshoe
Shutter
Shutter speed range60–1/4000 s
Continuous shooting3 frame/s up to 10 frames (approx.) in HQ JPEG mode
3 frame/s up to 5 frames (RAW)
Viewfinder
ViewfinderOptical 0.92x Pentaprism
Image processing
White balance7 / +7 steps in each R-B / G-M axis
General
LCD screen6.4 cm / 2.5″ TFT LCD, 215,000 pixels
BatteryLithium-Ion rechargeable
Weight375 g (body only)

The Olympus E-400 is a digital single-lens reflex camera launched by Olympus on 14 September 2006, using the Four Thirds System lens mount standard.[1] This 10 megapixel camera could be compared to other DSLRs unveiled during the summer of 2006 with comparable pixel count and price range: the Sony α 100, the Nikon D80, the Canon EOS 400D and the Pentax K10D.

  1. ^ "Olympus E-400: The world's smallest and lightest digital SLR" (Press release). Olympus imaging. 2006-09-14. Archived from the original on 2023-09-21. Retrieved 2006-09-14.