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SanDisk Launches Speedy Extreme Pro Compact Flash Card

ts by ts
September 16, 2009
in Gadgets
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SanDisk in another front, now with 16 and 64 GB CompactFlash Card named as SanDisk Extreme Pro. The speed of the card is about 90 megabytes per second for read/write mode.

I took this card out for several shoots, and have to say I’ve been impressed with how it handles. I didn’t gauge its “performance” with regard to its rated write speed as compared with other, more lowly and less pricey cards; rather, the proof of this card’s worth lies in how the card handles in the field.

As a photographer, I never want to miss the shot. You know the one — whether it’s an athlete’s elation at a successfully completed routine, a gymnast’s gravity-defying midair flip, or a couple’s first kiss at a wedding — those are the shots that burst-modes were made for. Unfortunately, even with SLRs that boast fast frames-per-second, well, those superfast ratings have been for shooting JPEG, not RAW.

Personally, I vascillate on the JPEG vs. RAW subject, and I’d prefer to shoot RAW, simply because I know I’m sacrificing potential image quality by not allowing myself to capture the most possible information for a shot, which a camera’s large, unprocessed RAW file provides. But I don’t have the time to do the necessary post-processing for every image that shooting RAW requires; plus, whenever I’ve tried shooting RAW only, or RAW plus JPEG, I’ve found myself quickly disappointed by missing a key backflip or sudden moment I thought I could capture, but couldn’t because my camera’s buffer had filled and I had sacrificed shooting speed.

Between my trigger-happy shutter finger and my desire to capture “the moment,” I can fill a camera’s buffer in heartbeat using just JPEG (and even using CompactFlash cards rated at 300X, the previous top-tier card). (An aside: Some manufacturers list ratings in so-called x-ratings, much like DVD drives have “X” speed rating; other manufacturers, like SanDisk, use names instead to describe speed, although it does note the Extreme Pro as equivalent to a “600X” card.) The more sluggish write speeds for shooting the large RAW files was, for me, too much of a sacrifice.

Until now. With the SanDisk Extreme Pro card, I didn’t feel constrained because I was shooting RAW. Nor did I feel constrained when I shot using the camera’s RAW + JPEG Fine modes — which captured both file types for me. (I consider that the holy grail of shooting — this way, I have the high-quality JPEGs for quick sharing, and immediate use, and the high-quality RAW file for editing, cropping, and finessing image worthy of the extra effort.

Using an SLR rated at 7 frames-per-second for JPEGs (and 5 frames-per-second RAW), I shot a parade. I shot a wedding. I shot daily happenings, sights passing by out of a car window, and more — and I captured every moment I intended to. I have yet to try and capture a multirelease sequence on men’s high bar, but my early hands-on with the card leaves me hopeful that I’ll be able to do so.

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More importantly, this card makes it clear that there are real and tangible differences among flash memory cards. Just because a card is on sale with a deep rebate doesn’t mean that card will take full advantage of your camera’s capabilities. If you have a newer digital SLR that supports the fast UDMA (mode 6) interface — cameras like the Nikon D3, Nikon D300 and D300S, Nikon D700, Canon EOS 5D Mark II, Canon EOS 50D, and the forthcoming Canon EOS 7D — a card like the SanDisk Extreme Pro can be well worth its high price of admission. Yes, $300 is costly for a 16GB card, but in the end it’s a small price if it means capturing the moments you’re missing in the best quality possible.

Portions of this article from thinkdigit.com.

Tags: Digital CamerasSanDisk
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TechSansar.com, ICT For Media Pvt Ltd, Regd #249079/077/078, VAT #609868175.
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