Pentax Q

Pentax Q

Pentax Q with zoom lens
Overview
Maker Pentax
Type Mirrorless
Lens
Lens mount Pentax Q-mount, bayonet, stainless steel mount
Sensor/Medium
Image sensor type BSI-CMOS sensor
Image sensor size 1/2.3 (1/1.7 for Q7 and Q-S1), 12.4 megapixel
Maximum resolution 4:3 native: 4000 x 3000, 3456x2592, 2688x2016, 1920x1440
ASA/ISO range 125-6400
Recording medium SD, SDHC, SDXC
Focusing
Focus autofocus with manual override
Flash
Flash built-in: P-TTL, popup extension, GN 7m, 1/2000 s sync (leaf shutter), 1/13 s (electronic); external P-TTL, 1/250 s sync
Shutter
Frame rate 5-frame burst; 1.5fps sustained
Shutter electronic, leaf shutter in lens where applicable
Shutter speeds 30 s to 1/2000 s mechanical; 2 s to 1/8000 s electronic
Viewfinder
Viewfinder optional optical suitable for 8.5mm f1.9 lens
Image Processing
Custom WB auto, CTE, manual set; presets: daylight, shade, cloudy, fluorescent (D, N, W, L), tungsten, flash; fine adjustment available in all modes
General
Video/movie recording 1920x1080 30fps, 1280x720 30fps, 640x480 30fps
Rear LCD monitor 360x320x4 luminance-R-G-B HVGA; color LCD
Battery proprietary, rechargeable li-ion battery, Pentax D-LI68
Data Port(s) USB 2.0
Body composition or special features mechanical sensor-shift image stabilization (photography); electronic image stabilization (video)
Dimensions 98 x 57 x 31 mm
(3.86 x 2.24 x 1.22")
Weight 180 g (0.40 lb / 6.35 oz)
Made in Philippines

The Pentax Q is a mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera introduced by Pentax on June 23, 2011.

Characteristics

Introduced as "The world's smallest interchangeable lens system camera…"[1] The Pentax Q system is composed of 4 bodies (Q, Q10, Q-7, Q-S1) and eight lenses: Three zooms (mid-range, wide, telephoto), one prime (8mm f1.9), and 4 "specialty" lenses (fish-eye, "toy wide", "toy tele", "mount shield lens"). The zooms and prime have leaf shutters (with built-in neutral density filters) which sync with flash up to 1/2000 of a second. The other lenses (and all adapted lenses) use the camera's electronic shutter.

The camera's small sensor size (1/2.3") means that the Q has a crop factor of 5.6× (compared to full-frame 35mm cameras), as well as a short flange focal distance (FFD). With the 5.6× crop factor, a 100mm macro lens (for example) results in a 35mm equivalent field of view (FOV) of a 560mm telephoto. An additional implication of the 5.6× crop factor and associated optics is that depth of field (DOF) is increased proportionally for a given aperture setting (in comparison to the 35mm equivalent DOF at the same aperture). This means that in some applications the small Pentax Q sensor offers an advantage over larger formats. This also allows the Pentax Q lenses to be proportionally smaller than lenses designed for larger formats. The Pentax Q has a wide range of digital effects and controls including High Dynamic Range (HDR), multiple scene modes, and a bokeh function which, when activated, can enable a pseudo shallow focus effect. The short FFD of the Pentax Q enables it to accept manual focus lenses from many manufacturers (via adapters) including Nikon F, Leica M and 39M, Olympus OM, Canon FD, Minolta, M42 screw mount, C-Mount, D-Mount, Pentax K, Pentax Auto 110, and Pentax 6×7.[2] The camera is equipped with sensor-shift image stabilization technology to improve image quality at slow shutter speeds or when using telephoto lenses. It has a "focus peaking" function as well. Sensor shift and focus peaking functions also work with adapted lenses.

The Q7 and Q-S1 models have a larger sensor size (1/1.7") resulting in a crop factor of 4.6×.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.