any brand of card reader to recommend? there's so many of them out there not sure which one is good, fast and reliable.
Just curious... SD cards rated at 60 mb/s has the same speed as CF cards rated at 60mb/s then? Because now that my camera can take both, I'm wondering if I should consider utilizing both.
As for reader, good readers will allow you to download images to your computer faster. That's all. But it all contributes to the overall card speed experience.![]()
any brand of card reader to recommend? there's so many of them out there not sure which one is good, fast and reliable.
Many are pro Sandisk here..
I remember Sanddisk has lifetime warranty but I can't claim it as receipt ink has vaporized...
Or you can just buy the USB 2.0 readers.. They are as good as the USB 3.0 brothers.Would love to have USB 3.0 readers but iMac only has 2.0 slots!!!![]()
NewbieInCS said:I once worked in a shop that sells card reader...so I tested a whole bunch of them...
USB2.0 compliant does not mean it really is usb 2.0 speed, just mean plug into usb 2.0 port it will work. Some are still the usb1.1 which transfer data at 1mb/s rate. Some USB2.0 really can hit near 30mb/s rate.
Same thing for USB3.0 card readers. May or may not get the full speed.
In my limited testing, some crappier ones had very weak pins, or maybe just poor guide in the card slot. The sandisk reader is not bad.
justinpws said:Just my personal opinion, don't use Kingston. I've had a Kingston card on me that gave me 50% corrupted shots (meaning half my shots couldn't be read when downloading). Minimum, use sandisk. They're cards aren't that expensive and these cards are reliable enough.
On the other hand, if you have some cash to burn and are likely to shoot alot of photos and for a long time, I suggest Lexar. They're the ultimate in reliability. Price wise, they're of course higher than sandisk and kingston but there's good reason for that price.
All in all, if you really need a new card soon, just buy sandisk. Don't go for any other brand. Later on, when you have the time, then look for a lexar if you're keen on it.
Speed wise, you don't really feel it when it's in your camera so anything would do. It's only when you download do you feel the difference in the card speed.
For Sandisk, I'd recommend the following depending on your budget:
Cheap and Usable: Sandisk Ultra. Cheap and works fine in-camera. Downloading is a little slow, especially if you want a 16GB card
Not-so-cheap but good: Sandisk Extreme. This comes in extreme 3 or extreme 4. Take your pick. Really fast downloading speeds but also not cheap.
Hope this helps!
Halfmoon said:I think san disk now hv only extreme n extreme pro....