Help... Need advice about CF cards
Hello everyone, I want to start off by saying that I'm new to the digital world, I just purchased a Canon S1 IS. I looking to get another CF card and wanted some info about the different types and speed. With the camera I do have a 32 card, I also purcashed a 512 Kingston. I was thinking about getting another 512 or a 1gb card. I'm really lost about the speed of cards and which ones are better then the others. I'm using the carnera for sport and pictures of family and friends, also scenic pictures. I know that the speed factor is the best thing for taking sport shots. Thanks in advance.
Re: Help... Need advice about CF cards
Hey James,
Check out this thread. There is a link in that thread to a site with TONS of CF card info.
http://forums.photographyreview.com/...light=CF+Cards
Re: Help... Need advice about CF cards
Quote:
Originally Posted by JamesV
Hello everyone, I want to start off by saying that I'm new to the digital world, I just purchased a Canon S1 IS. I looking to get another CF card and wanted some info about the different types and speed. With the camera I do have a 32 card, I also purcashed a 512 Kingston. I was thinking about getting another 512 or a 1gb card. I'm really lost about the speed of cards and which ones are better then the others. I'm using the carnera for sport and pictures of family and friends, also scenic pictures. I know that the speed factor is the best thing for taking sport shots. Thanks in advance.
For P&S cameras, the speed of the camera itself is almost always the speed bottleneck. Faster cards don't make the camera operate any faster. Fast reaction time for sports is not improved by faster cards, that's an AF issue.
Re: Help... Need advice about CF cards
I have Lexar cards rated from 24x to 80x, and in my Coolpix 5000 I can't really tell any appreciable difference. That camera is a few years old, and newer cameras generally write faster than older cameras. I haven't taken a stopwatch to it, I'm talking about real-world - at least in my case. It's just not a fast camera, that's all.
CF cards are almost a commodity these days. I stick with Lexar because I did have a problem once and they were great about taking care of it quickly. Just because of that, I'm sticking with them. I buy the fastest cards they have available at the time, but mainly because these cards include their latest data recovery software, etc. Also the speed is somewhat of a factor in my DSLR, but mine isn't exactly lightning-quick either... ;)
Re: Help... Need advice about CF cards
thanks for the help everyone.
mjs1973, I'm going to read that right now.
and again thanks for the info.