I decided very recently to dip my toe in the micro 4/3 world, and bought a refurbished Panasonic G5 with version 1 of the 14-42mm kit lens, as a low cost entry point. My intention was to see whether the camera, with one or two lenses, could become my lightweight carry everywhere camera.
I love the camera itself for it's handling and configurability (I have small hands - don't think it would work too well if you have big hands). I have every key control set on a button, and it's all viewable in the EVF. Definitely ahead of my Canon 600D
However, I was distinctly underwhelmed by the quality of the images. I could get something reasonable out of RAW images with a lot of pp, but it seemed like a lot more work than it should be. I wasn't quite sure where to go next, but a camera without acceptable IQ is no camera at all.
Anyway, I did some more research and it appeared that version II of the lens, though still a "kit" lens, was much superior. Anyway, after some soul searching and much reading (remembering the cheap entry point), I decided to give the version II a try.
It arrived yesterday - and it's like chalk and cheese. I've only had chance to shoot a few test images but they are crisp, sharp and decently saturated (that's the RAW), haven't tried the jpegs yet). Very, very much happier.
Lessons? Not sure. Maybe looking for a cheap entry pint was always going to be a mistake. Maybe should have done more research - although in truth the refurb deal was a pretty good one. Of course it's possible that the original lens was a bad copy, but I don't think so. One thing is for sure, if you are thinking of buying one of these lenses - DON'T buy the version 1.
In truth I'm not that much worse off financially. I have a lens that I don't need, but can probably off load on ebay for a few £'s. I have a set up that I'm certainly going to give a run out to, and a bunch of experience.
I had pretty much decided to upgrade my DSLR to a 70D next year, and look into buying better glass to go with it (yes, I know that's the wrong order!), but I think I'm going to put that on hold. The same money invested in micro 4/3 could put together a nice set of kit.
Ah well, enough rambling for now. Any comments appreciated.
Dave