» Olympus HLD-4 POWER BATTERY HOLDER E-3
Olympus HLD-4 POWER BATTERY HOLDER E-3 Details
Binding: ElectronicsBrand: Olympus
Color: Black
EAN: 0050332160736
Feature: Compatible with Olympus E-3
Is Autographed: 0
Is Memorabilia: 0
Label: Olympus
Manufacturer: Olympus
Model: 260253
Publisher: Olympus
Studio: Olympus
Olympus HLD-4 POWER BATTERY HOLDER E-3 Features
- Compatible with Olympus E-3
- Power for extended use
- Ideal for portrait shooting
- Dust & splash proof
- Holds 2x BLM-1
Items related to Olympus HLD-4 POWER BATTERY HOLDER E-3
- Olympus Evolt E-3 10.1MP Digital SLR Camera with Mechanical Image Stabilization (Body Only)
- Olympus BLM-01 Lithium-ion Rechargeable Battery for C7070, C8080, E1, E300 & E500 Digital Cameras
- Olympus Zuiko 12-60mm f/2.8-4.0 Digital ED SWD Lens for Olympus Digital SLR Cameras
- Olympus STRAP GRIP AS-GS3
- Olympus Zuiko 50-200mm f/2.8-3.5 Digital ED SWD Lens for Olympus Digital SLR Cameras
Olympus HLD-4 POWER BATTERY HOLDER E-3 Reviews
Customer Rating:




Summary: Essentially a necessity for a fast E3
Comment: The E3's fast focus, rapid cycle time, SWD focus system all consume power - the HLD-4 like its previous battery holders allows you to parallel two BLM-1's Olympus BLM-01 Lithium-ion Rechargeable Battery for C7070, C8080, E1, E300 & E500 Digital Cameras for twice the shooting time, exposures, or simply a longer timeout so your camera is always ready. You can also charge one battery while still using the camera on the other one if you charge before they both go dead. As before, you get the portrait shutter button which I do use when holding 90 degree rotation. One difference is this can use 6 AA's which is a first for me personally. Olympus's glossy sheet quotes that this will improve focus times - this is generally due to the paralleling of the two batteries and thus the higher voltage when charging flash, running focus motor, logic, etc. 6AA's @ 1.2 V (assuming NIMH) is 7.2V in line with the lithium, or 9V using 1.5V alkaline. There is always a debate here because alkaline cells quickly develop internal impedance and thus don't give you 9V through the life of the cell, while NiMH cells do run 1.2 V or higher for the useful life of the cell. Some experimentation is needed to compare actual voltage delivered to the camera with 2 li-ion vs 6 NIMH cells in the HLD-4. The higher the voltage under load, the faster the camera will operate. In either case, I'm sure the power flexibility it adds will please all E3 shooters. At 199, I'm a bit shocked (no pun intended) at the price as I just paid 84 bucks for my last HLD-3 for the E300 back I picked up off ebay for $170. Getting 2 additional megapixels is not cheap if you want to run the bleading edge; all E3 owners will still find Olympus hardware a great value compared to Canon equivalent backs & lenses as they always have.



