| Author | Thread |
|
|
01/11/2007 01:02:22 AM · #1 |
I was in the process of doing a 'valid' comparison of the performance of a standard Sandisk 1.0gb compact flash card with the Sandisk Ultra 2 1.0gb card to see if it was really worth the extra money to buy a faster card. However, when I started comparing the prices (at B&H) I found out that the Ultra 2 cards are about the same price as the standard cards, and cheaper in some instances.
Here are the results of the test I did anyway:
I set the camera at ISO 400 in high res jpg mode and shot at a very contrasty scene to make larger jpg files for this test...
Continuous burst before the camera paused:
Standard card - 12 photos
Ultra 2 card - 14 photos
10 frame burst with 3 second pause between bursts:
Standard card - 13 photos
Ultra 2 card - 16 photos
5 frame burst with 2 second pause between bursts:
Standard card - 14 photos
Ultra 2 card - 17 photos
Time to download 916mb from the card using a usb 2 reader:
Standard card - 2:39
Ultra 2 card - 1:37
These results would vary with different cameras. I used the Canon EOS 20d, but a camera with a larger internal buffer would perform better.
I thought it was interesting that the standard speed card performed almost as well as the 48x Ultra 2 card.
|
|
|
|
01/11/2007 01:09:59 AM · #2 |
Sandisk is notorious for not listing speeds on their cards (particularly their lower end cards) and duping people into buying them because of their name.
I avoid them at all costs because I believe I will get ripped off no matter what.
I own 2 4GB cards and recently sold my long standing 1GB card.
I have a 120x in my camera now and a 100X apacer in my PDA as backup for the camera if needed.
Having used a 1GB 45X in the 30D, I would say that it would only become a real issue if you were shooting 5FPS in RAW or max JPG or something.
I've noticed that playback is also a fair bit slower on the 1GB 45X, but very quick with the 4GB cards.
Both my current CF cards have lifetime warranties. |
|
|
|
01/11/2007 01:10:26 AM · #3 |
Thanks, I was curious to see how this would turn out. Do you think there is anything to a better build/reliability to a faster card?
I have a standard 1 gig SanDisk and A Hitachi MicroDrive 1 gig card, and the micro drive lags on downloads, but it came with a camera I received and seems a few years old. Neither one has had any problems besides that.
|
|
|
|
01/11/2007 01:12:30 AM · #4 |
when I bought my D200 I found this speed comparison very helpful:card speed tests
There is a pull down to select many different cameras to see how they perform with many different cards. |
|
|
|
01/11/2007 01:26:19 AM · #5 |
Originally posted by Megatherian: when I bought my D200 I found this speed comparison very helpful:card speed tests
There is a pull down to select many different cameras to see how they perform with many different cards. |
That doesn't tell us much about how many pictures it can make before it chokes down though...
|
|
|
|
01/11/2007 01:31:04 AM · #6 |
Microdrives are limited in speed due to their moving parts.
nice link mega... useful!
|
|
|
|
01/11/2007 01:34:03 AM · #7 |
Originally posted by jmsetzler: Originally posted by Megatherian: when I bought my D200 I found this speed comparison very helpful:card speed tests
There is a pull down to select many different cameras to see how they perform with many different cards. |
That doesn't tell us much about how many pictures it can make before it chokes down though... |
well, not without a little math. But if you calulate your cameras buffer space with the average file size and write speed you can figure out pretty easily how each card will hold up. |
|
|
|
01/11/2007 01:44:25 AM · #8 |
I don't think I've ever filled my buffer shooting.
Then again, I'm not shooting sports or anything where I take long, high speed bursts of images. I don't really notice a difference between my old SanDisk 512MB cards and my new 2GB UltraII.
Still, it's good info to have if that kind of thing is what you shoot.
|
|
|
|
01/11/2007 01:45:29 AM · #9 |
Originally posted by Megatherian:
well, not without a little math. But if you calulate your cameras buffer space with the average file size and write speed you can figure out pretty easily how each card will hold up. |
It will still vary significantly though. The numbers in my original post are MUCH LARGER if i shoot at ISO 100 and put the lenscap on the camera to shoot a black frame. That drives the file size down to a minimum. JPEG files vary in size due to color and contrast shifts. The more of that in the photo, the larger the file size, so I tried to create a worst case scenario.
|
|
Home -
Challenges -
Community -
League -
Photos -
Cameras -
Lenses -
Learn -
Help -
Terms of Use -
Privacy -
Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2026 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 01/02/2026 06:12:07 PM EST.