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Panasonic DMW-LW55 55mm Wide Conversion Lens for Panasonic FZ7, FZ30 and FZ50 Digital Cameras

Panasonic DMW-LW55 55mm Wide Conversion Lens for Panasonic FZ7, FZ30 and FZ50 Digital Cameras

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Brand: Panasonic
Category: Photography

List Price: $249.95
Buy New: $99.99
You Save: $149.96 (60%)



New (6) Used (1) from $99.99

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews

Media: Electronics
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 3.2 x 3.2 x 1.6

MPN: DMW-LW55
Model: DMW-LW55
UPC: 037988985296
EAN: 0037988985296
ASIN: B000F59KHE

Release Date: August 15, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Converts FZ7 from 36mm to 25mm
  • Converts FZ30 from 35mm to 24.5mm
  • 3 elements in 3 groups
  • 55mm Filter accessory size
  • Lens adapter DMW-LA2 must be used to fit FZ7

Accessories:

  • Panasonic DMW-LA2 Lens Adapter for Panasonic FZ7 Digital Camera

Similar Items:

  • Panasonic DMW-LT55 55mm Tele Conversion Lens for Panasonic FZ7, FZ30, FZ18, and FZ50 Digital Cameras
  • Panasonic DMW-LA2 Lens Adapter for Panasonic FZ7 Digital Camera
  • Panasonic DMW-LC55 55mm Close Up Lens for Panasonic FZ7, FZ30, FZ18, and FZ50 Digital Cameras
  • Panasonic CGR-S006A/1B Li-ion Battery for Panasonic FZ50, FZ7, FZ18, and FZ30 Digital Cameras
  • Panasonic DMC-FZ50 10.1MP Digital Camera with 12x Optical Image Stabilized Zoom (Black)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Panasonic's vision of the digital future is driven by the needs and aspirations of its business customers and millions of consumers around the world who use its products every day. The company shares their dream to live a fuller life by providing ways of working smarter and enjoying the rewards of technological advances.


Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars A great product - recommended   July 2, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I have just come back from a trip to the Grand Canyon where I could compare this lens with taking normal photos without it. It makes a big difference to my Canyon shots so I am very happy that I have purchased this lens.
You have to be very careful not to take the photo when pointing towards the sun when using this lens to avoid reflections in the photo.



5 out of 5 stars This wide conversion lens is worth the money   June 4, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

It's confession time: I've bought cheaper aftermarket accessory lenses for various cameras I've owned over the years and have had too many disappointments with the quality of the results. A non-Panasonic tele lens for my FZ-50 had color fringing and softness along with lack of contrast. So, for my wide accessory lens I went with the manufacturer's product this time.

My preliminary results are hopeful - I'll add to this review as I use it more this summer, but I like the color and contrast so far. This takes you to about 25mm, which is handy. A weakness of the FZ-50 is that it just goes to about 35mm equivalent. And an accessory like this is a 'wart on the nose' of an otherwise lovely camera although this camera is more of a system camera than most advanced point and shoots such as the Fuji S7000 which I love to use for its fantastic imaging chip results.

Once you get these accessory lenses and other gear, you morph from 'camera hanging off the neck' to needing a specialized camera kit bag or backpack. But for specialized uses e.g. birding, or architectural uses it is the only way to go. So, it's thumbs up on this handy critter. Don't go cheepo!

Addendum: Finally got around to using this in an urban area and am quite satisfied with its characteristics when used with my Panasonic DMC-FZ50 as an add on wide angle lens which has good sharpness, contrast and color fidelity. It must be noted that you have to go into the menu system on the FZ-50 and select WIDE for the lens type (and don't forget to deselect it when you remove it). Manual focus can be quicker, or you can just set it to the hyperfocal distance of 12 feet or so. Auto focus works with a slight lag. It's a real pleasure to "get it all in" without stepping back all the time!



4 out of 5 stars Good Optics   April 13, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I am very pleased with the quality of the conversion lens. As a previous reviewer said, wide angle tends to be much more useful to people than a super tele, unless yor into wildlife or sports photagraphy. My only complaint is that when attched to the camera you aren't supposed to zoom, you are supposed to use it at max wideangle on the camera (24mm focal length with the converter). The FZ-50 max wide without the conversion is 35mm focal length. So there is a large gap, use 24 or 35 focal length. But I intend to experiment with Zooming with the converter attached and see if it adversly affects performance. I want to be able to shoot in that gap.


5 out of 5 stars You pay for the picture quality   January 9, 2008
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

This lens is quite expensive but delivers superb quality. If you're after picture quality, this is what you need. It was designed specifically for the cameras it works with, so you can see where the quality comes from. That's why I would not use a no-name, or even Nikon, or Olympus wide converter with my Panasonic camera. Also do not buy this to work with your non-Panasonic camera, I believe the quality would diminish. The optics of the camera and the optics of the converter have to be designed for each other. Only the OEM can do that.


2 out of 5 stars Too Expensive   November 24, 2007
 13 out of 14 found this review helpful

The primary flaw of my Lumix DMC FZ8 is that it caters to the telephoto crowd--the same folks who got their first 35mm SLR and then wanted a telephoto zoom to go with it. The truth is, most people will use a good wide angle about 90 percent of the time. They're also the same folks pushed up against a wall trying to fit in wide shots.

So along comes Panasonic's answer: a 3-element lens that gives users the wide angles they need. Are these Leica-ground multi-coated premium quality lenses? Hardly. This is a screw-in converter, the same kind that used to cost $29.95 in New York camera stores for the 35mm crowd who couldn't afford a real wide-angle lens. But $225+ is just too much to ask for a 3-element lens, unless it's Hubble quality computer-designed lens.

Barrel distortion is quite noticable at this wide setting, but then, even the old Vivitar 2x converters were 4-element designs.

Buy a budget converter. There's software that can help with distortion, but don't expect much from any converter...even if it costs as much as the camera!


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