By 1983, the camera industry was shifting fast.
Autofocus was the new frontier — and Olympus, always willing to innovate, didn’t want to be left behind.
The result was the Olympus OM-30 (known in North America as the OM-F):
an unusual and ambitious camera that tried to bridge the gap between traditional manual SLRs and the autofocus future.
It wasn’t perfect.
It wasn’t even a true autofocus camera.
But it was a fascinating glimpse of what Olympus thought might be possible.
How the OM-30 Tried to Change the Game
The OM-30 was built on the OM-20’s chassis —
but with significant changes inside.
- Focus Confirmation System:
Using sensors in the viewfinder, the OM-30 could detect when a subject was in focus.
LED arrows pointed left or right to tell you which way to turn the focus ring.
When focus was achieved, a green light confirmed it. - (Almost) Autofocus Capability:
With the rare Zuiko 35–70mm f/4 Auto Focus lens,
the OM-30 could actually move the lens elements to achieve basic autofocus.
Slow, clunky, and very limited — but technically an autofocus system. - Manual Focusing Always Available:
Without the special lens, the OM-30 functioned as a standard manual focus camera, with helpful focus confirmation aids. - Built-In Manual Control:
Like the OM-20, full manual shutter speed selection was built-in — no adapter needed.
Key Features of the OM-30
- Focus Assist LEDs:
Viewfinder arrows help guide manual focus. - Autofocus (with Special Lens Only):
Supports Olympus 35–70mm f/4 Auto Focus lens for limited autofocus operation. - Aperture Priority and Manual Exposure Modes:
Flexibility for beginners and experienced users. - Quartz-Timed Shutter:
Speeds from 2 seconds to 1/1000s, plus 1/45s mechanical backup. - TTL Flash Metering:
Through-the-lens flash with Olympus T-series flashes. - Motor Drive Compatibility:
Winder 2 or Motor Drive 1 ready. - Bright Viewfinder:
~93% coverage with shutter speed and focus confirmation indicators. - Battery Powered:
Requires two SR44 batteries for full operation.
How the OM-30 Compared to the OM-20
| Feature | OM-20 | OM-30 |
|---|---|---|
| Focus Assist | None | LED arrows + green confirmation |
| Autofocus | No | Only with dedicated lens |
| Shutter Modes | Aperture Priority + Manual | Aperture Priority + Manual |
| Top Plate | Strengthened alloy | Same with additional electronics |
| Circuitry | Basic metering | Advanced focus detection sensors |
The OM-30 was a genuine technological step forward —
but Olympus released it into a market not yet ready for autofocus SLRs.
And autofocus itself needed a few more years (and better motors) to become practical.
How to Estimate the Age of Your OM-30
| Serial Number Range | Approximate Production Years |
|---|---|
| 100000 – 300000 | OM-30 |
Production numbers were relatively low.
The OM-30 is much rarer on the used market today than OM-10s or OM-20s.
Serial Location:
- Engraved on the top plate near the rewind crank.
Olympus OM-30: Full Specifications
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Year Released | 1983 |
| Shutter Speeds | 2s – 1/1000s (Quartz-timed), 1/45s mechanical backup |
| Flash Sync | 1/45s |
| Metering | Centre-weighted average |
| Exposure Modes | Aperture Priority, Manual |
| Focus Modes | Manual with focus confirmation, basic autofocus with special lens |
| Viewfinder Coverage | ~93% |
| Motor Drive Compatibility | Winder 2, Motor Drive 1 |
| Batteries | Two 1.5V SR44 or one 3V CR1/3N |
| TTL Flash Support | Yes |
| Body Material | Composite reinforced body |
OM-30 Manual for Download
Final Word
The OM-30 didn’t change photography forever.
It didn’t become a best-seller.
It wasn’t even that good at autofocus.
But it mattered.
It showed that Olympus — even facing a rapidly changing market —
kept innovating, kept experimenting, and kept pushing for better tools.
And that spirit — the spirit that created the OM-1 —
still burned brightly inside.
If you find an OM-30 today, you’re holding a fascinating piece of SLR history:
one foot in the mechanical past, one foot reaching towards the future.