if u r worried abt SD cards crashing (i think not common) i guess u can get the better ones like Sandisk, Kingston ..
make sure u get the correct one for ur camera / device.
some camera supports SDHC and have backward compatibility
if u r worried abt SD cards crashing (i think not common) i guess u can get the better ones like Sandisk, Kingston ..
make sure u get the correct one for ur camera / device.
some camera supports SDHC and have backward compatibility
OT abit more. Recently, I went to memory world in Funan and saw transcend 4GB 150X SD card. They say it's not SDHC card and it's faster then SDHC class 6 4GB. Can be read in normal Card reader w/o SDHC support.
Sorry, I really don't get your statement above. How does a heavily loaded SD card translate to focus speed? As far as I know, there is no interaction at the point of focussing. Maybe only if you are shooting continuous......
Haha..this statement makes me think for a while.....I actually thought it's due to the card overloaded.....Yeah you're right, it doesn't affect....my focusing solved after resetting the settings to default.
The SD card does not affect focusing. But it does affect the rate at which information is transferred and cleared from your camera buffer when you are shooting continuous, in order to take the next few shots.
I tried 8GB Kingston Class 6 on D80. Not problems even if i shot it at cold weather, giving ~700 shots in RAW. Transfer to PC of cause it takes longer, as it is 8GB data.
I think it is a reasonable capacity if you intend to shot in RAW, JPEG could be too much. Just my 2 cents.
Have one card and download to your pc HD and burn a dvd copy of it (dvd blanks are cheap these days). Then delete all previous old photos from your card. Save money and carry only one card.
i have a kingston 8GB SD4HC in my nikon D80...works just fine...i got it for S$50 during the last PC/IT show at suntec city...
though i did notice some card readers can't read it...
then again i've got a few 1GB and 2GB SD cards than i usually rotate as a dedicated disk for a particular subject, i.e. family pix, work, night shots, etc...