Opinions on CD cards for 1d MKIII
/forum/topic/789602/0

end

Scuppy
Registered: Apr 10, 2006
Total Posts: 337
Country: United States

Hi all...
Just ordered a 1D Mark III and will be here next week

I have been using 4gig San Disk Extreme III's on my 40Ds and was going to get some new cards or a card for the new body.

Any opinions on the San Disk Extreme IV and does it take a different card reader?

How much better do you feel is the Extreme IV as opposed to the III's

Was thinking about getting two 8 gig cards as opposed to a 16gig. I have always had the fear if something went wrong and I had a total shoot on one card.

How many of you use the small card for backup..? along ith the CD card?

Any opinions will be appreciated.
Thanks,
Scuppy



Ty Holland
Registered: May 28, 2007
Total Posts: 651
Country: United States

We use the 4GB Extreme III's (CF and SDHC) in our Canon 1DMKIII's. It makes it easy for back-ups, one card, one single layer DVD.

Ty

www.thephotomafia.com



helimat
Registered: Apr 06, 2008
Total Posts: 1454
Country: Canada

No advantage to the Extreme IV in write speed on the Mark III, as it is not UDMA. However you will see an increase in speed in read time when downloading to your computer, but only if you have a UDMA reader as well. I use Extreme III's both CF and SDHC and am quite happy with them in my Mark III. YMMV...



phillipyan
Registered: May 26, 2009
Total Posts: 184
Country: United States

I almost opened an identical new post...I just have my 1DIII and wondering which SDHC to use. RG's data suggest the Mark III tops out at 15mb/sec read/write speed, makes me wonder if I should blow extra 20 bucks for the Extreme III 30mb/sec version. Downloading to computer is no concern to me.



David Israel
Registered: Nov 06, 2007
Total Posts: 2334
Country: United States

helimat wrote:
No advantage to the Extreme IV in write speed on the Mark III, as it is not UDMA. However you will see an increase in speed in read time when downloading to your computer, but only if you have a UDMA reader as well. I use Extreme III's both CF and SDHC and am quite happy with them in my Mark III. YMMV...


I used the same in my Mark III and never had a problem.



gdanmitchell
Registered: Jun 28, 2009
Total Posts: 771
Country: United States

You don't need to get anything all that special when it comes of CF cards. I always by inexpensive cards from vendors with guarantees and I've never had a problem. I would never pay extra for "name brand" cards nor would I pay for more speed than my camera can take advantage of.

CF cards are basically a cheap commodity item these days. Spending a bunch of extra to "get the best" is mostly a waste of money.

Dan



Tomagado
Registered: Sep 14, 2003
Total Posts: 1514
Country: United States

gdanmitchell wrote:

CF cards are basically a cheap commodity item these days. Spending a bunch of extra to "get the best" is mostly a waste of money.

Dan


You must not fill your buffer often, if ever. Or shoot anything that demands bursts.

A CF card that matches your cameras write speed is worth spending for. Thankfully, the mid end is often fast enough, but I would strongly urge people to not get the cheapest they can find, once you hit that buffer, waiting 5 seconds, 10 seconds, 15 seconds sure feels like a lot longer when you need to get the next shot.

Also, downloading with a nice FW800 card reader and a high speed card vs USB and a standard speed card can be a difference of 5-15minutes depending on the size of the card.

Cheers,
Thomas



helimat
Registered: Apr 06, 2008
Total Posts: 1454
Country: Canada

gdanmitchell wrote:
You don't need to get anything all that special when it comes of CF cards. I always by inexpensive cards from vendors with guarantees and I've never had a problem. I would never pay extra for "name brand" cards nor would I pay for more speed than my camera can take advantage of.

CF cards are basically a cheap commodity item these days. Spending a bunch of extra to "get the best" is mostly a waste of money.

Dan


I am sorry but I have to disagree here. I get the best my camera can handle, but no further. When the rebates are going the price of SanDisk Extreme III's are pretty low, and are a quality name brand card that I wholly trust.



halse
Registered: Oct 29, 2005
Total Posts: 72
Country: United States

fwiw: the new 34 nm process cards will be coming out soon (a few weeks) so look for big price drops on the current versions (and SSD prices will become almost reasonable)



globalkiwi
Registered: Jul 02, 2008
Total Posts: 1912
Country: United States

FWIW, I haven't been able to persuade myself that shelling out the extra for the Extreme IV's is worthwhile - I use the Sandisk E. III's in various (increasing) sizes for both my 1DIII & 5DII.



kster
Registered: May 27, 2006
Total Posts: 6
Country: United States

Sandisk has some good deals going on now if you don't mind waiting for the rebate to arrive; I bought an 8GB extreme III card from adorama.com last night for my 1DmkIII.



gdanmitchell
Registered: Jun 28, 2009
Total Posts: 771
Country: United States

I don't expect you to actually look at my photography but it is there if you want to see it. Among the photographs are wildlife including birds in flight and also professional bicycle racing.

I fill my buffer.

A CF card that matches your camera's speed makes sense. That's what I use. I never suggested anything else. Paying extra for a brand name card that matches your camera's speed or paying extra for a card that exceeds your camera's speed do not make sense. (Yes, your images may download from your card reader a few seconds faster... )

The card you use does not make a "5-15 minute difference" in the speed of download from the card reader. I regularly fill a 16GB card and it doesn't take that amount of time to download the entire batch of photos. If your reader is taking 15 minutes it is not the card's fault.

Dan

Tomagado wrote:
gdanmitchell wrote:

CF cards are basically a cheap commodity item these days. Spending a bunch of extra to "get the best" is mostly a waste of money.

Dan


You must not fill your buffer often, if ever. Or shoot anything that demands bursts.

A CF card that matches your cameras write speed is worth spending for. Thankfully, the mid end is often fast enough, but I would strongly urge people to not get the cheapest they can find, once you hit that buffer, waiting 5 seconds, 10 seconds, 15 seconds sure feels like a lot longer when you need to get the next shot.

Also, downloading with a nice FW800 card reader and a high speed card vs USB and a standard speed card can be a difference of 5-15minutes depending on the size of the card.

Cheers,
Thomas



rextter
Registered: Apr 05, 2008
Total Posts: 101
Country: United Kingdom

I have a couple of Scandisk cards and they're ok. One has let me down in the past. An Extreme III would store images but corrupt them so they couldn't be downloaded/read by a PC.

My prime card is a Lexar Professional 8Gb UDMA 300x speed. I know the camera (nor my PC) can take advantage of UDMA. The card is brilliant, has never ever let me down is is always the first one I use for the most vital images.

I prefer 8gb over 4gb because of the fps of the 1dm3. A card can fill quite quickly and with over 500 RAW shots on a 8GB you're not constantly worrying about space. So I have three 8GB cards. It's easy to fill two of them doing a fairly small wedding.



Lars Johnsson
Registered: Jun 29, 2003
Total Posts: 22472
Country: Sweden

I just pick a cheap card in my box


This image is copyrighted by the owner





Just keep your Sandisk Extreme III. There is not any reason to upgrade to the Extreme IV with your camera. I have a couple of Extreme III 16GB for my 1D3 body and it's a good combo. But mostly I prefer the lower priced Transcend cards. The Transcend UDMA 133x cards are really good and has a low price. Not fast but if you need a fast there is the Transcend UDMA 300x card. It's as fast as Extreme IV or anything else that Sandisk makes.


Breitling65
Registered: May 31, 2006
Total Posts: 2233
Country: United States

I am using Sandisk Extrime III - 30m/sec and Extrime III SDHC both 8G. Other brands might be fine, but I prefer Sandisk with rebates option.



phillipyan
Registered: May 26, 2009
Total Posts: 184
Country: United States

Lars Johnsson wrote:
I just pick a cheap card in my box


This image is copyrighted by the owner



.


Your cache of cards have a total memory more than my desktop computer and laptop +CF+ SD combined


Scuppy
Registered: Apr 10, 2006
Total Posts: 337
Country: United States

Quick follow up to my original post....

Does switching cards between camera bodies mess things up at all...
Reason I am asking that I do have San Disk Extreme IIIs that I have used in my 40Ds
but my new Mark III will be here on Wed and am still looking for some deals on some new cards and was wondering if I can switch between camera bodies of different types and still be ok..I have tried to use the same cards all the time in the same bodies in the past...

Does this question makes sense?

Thanks,
Scuppy



nathanlake
Registered: May 23, 2005
Total Posts: 5713
Country: United States

Scuppy wrote:
Quick follow up to my original post....

Does switching cards between camera bodies mess things up at all...
Reason I am asking that I do have San Disk Extreme IIIs that I have used in my 40Ds
but my new Mark III will be here on Wed and am still looking for some deals on some new cards and was wondering if I can switch between camera bodies of different types and still be ok..I have tried to use the same cards all the time in the same bodies in the past...

Does this question makes sense?

Thanks,
Scuppy




In theory, it should not mess things up, but I always re-format a card when I place it in the camera. That means I avoid shooting some shots on one body and switching the card to another and shooting some more.



helimat
Registered: Apr 06, 2008
Total Posts: 1454
Country: Canada

It might mess up the file numbering order, but nothing else. As Nathan Lake said, a quick reformat before switching bodies is advisable and would eliminate the changing of file numbers.



EB-1
Registered: Jan 09, 2003
Total Posts: 10655
Country: United States

If a 5D MK II or newer is in your future, then EX4 cards are better. If there is a 1d MK IV, you may also regret getting the slower cards. However, a mere 16GB is nothing, so you can get faster cards later and use the "slow" EX3 cards for secondary storage.

If you plan to use the SDHC card for backup, the 16GB EX3 is OK.

EBH



Methodical
Registered: Nov 10, 2008
Total Posts: 99
Country: United States

I use the Lexar 8gb UDMA 300x as I had purchased them when I got the 50D which takes advantage of the UDMA. I always look for rebates. The last 2 I purchased (recently) they had a $60 rebate. So I got both for $100. Plus I alway reformat the card after transferring the files to the hard drive...to me it's easier and faster than deleting the files.



Colin Key
Registered: Jul 08, 2007
Total Posts: 590
Country: Portugal

phillipyan wrote:
Lars Johnsson wrote:
I just pick a cheap card in my box


This image is copyrighted by the owner



.


Your cache of cards have a total memory more than my desktop computer and laptop +CF+ SD combined

And that is just the top layer!!! How deep is that box?

Colin


Seth Tower
Registered: Oct 10, 2006
Total Posts: 3751
Country: United States

Colin Key wrote:
phillipyan wrote:
Lars Johnsson wrote:
I just pick a cheap card in my box
.


Your cache of cards have a total memory more than my desktop computer and laptop +CF+ SD combined


And that is just the top layer!!! How deep is that box?
Colin


Damn!



Alex Paul
Registered: Jan 02, 2006
Total Posts: 3917
Country: United States

Lars: I would guess under the cards is your stash of replacement shutter assemblies
Take care pal



end