How do I work out what zoom a lens has?

Caporegime
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This information seems almost top secret in that I can't find any websites discussing it.

How do I work out what zoom a lens has on a digital camera? The camera I am using now is a fuji s8000fd with an 18x zoom lens for example, how do I work out what magnification the standard 14-42mm lens on the Olympus EPL-1 can provide?
 
This information seems almost top secret in that I can't find any websites discussing it.

How do I work out what zoom a lens has on a digital camera? The camera I am using now is a fuji s8000fd with an 18x zoom lens for example, how do I work out what magnification the standard 14-42mm lens on the Olympus EPL-1 can provide?

By looking at the number :p 42mm is three times more than 14, so it has a 3x zoom. A 50-150 would still have a 3x zoom.

The equivilent field of view is 28-84mm because of the 2x multiplier.
 
Combination of factors, I suppose.

Camera sensors are, for the most part much larger than your pupils which act as the sensors when looking through the microscope.

Also don't microscopes use fixed lenses (one magnification for each lens then you just turn it to another lens for more/less) which are much less complicated than zooms and they have built in lighting, so don't need to let in as much light.

And magnification isn't the same as zoom, the Canon MP-e 65 will do 5x magnification and it's tiny compared to say a Sigma 300-800 which would only do about 0.15x mag.
 
Do you know if there are any smaller lenses available for the EPL-1, a fixed focus one perhaps? Would be nice to have something more compact just for leisure stuff.
 
Olympus do a 17mm f2.8 pancake lens, Panasonic also do a 20mm f1.7 pancake. Both of these are tiny.

They're fixed focal length btw, not fixed focus.
 
Funny I've got the same camera and have been wondering this. I've noticed you get kind of a distortion if you zoom to far in or out.
 
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