Sunday, December 11, 2011

SanDisk 16GB 60MB/s Extreme Compact Flash Card SDCFX-016G-A61 (US Retail Package)

SanDisk 16GB 60MB/s Extreme Compact Flash Card SDCFX-016G-A61 (US Retail Package)

SanDisk 16GB 60MB/s Extreme Compact Flash Card SDCFX-016G-A61 - Product Features

  • Power core controller For moving data efficiently.
  • 16GB storage space For storing photos, videos, games and more.
  • Compatible with CompactFlash-enabled devices Including digital SLR cameras.
  • 60MB/sec. write and read speeds Captures pictures taken in rapid succession.


Technical Details
  • Brand Name: SanDisk
  • Model: SDCFX-016G-A61

SanDisk 16GB 60MB/s Extreme Compact Flash Card SDCFX-016G-A61 - Product Description

Sandisk Extreme SDCFX-016G-A61 CompactFlash (CF) Card SDCFX-016G-A61 210

SanDisk 16GB 60MB/s Extreme Compact Flash Card SDCFX-016G-A61 - Customer Reviews

By PD
I started in 2005 with the Ultra II series and have continually sold & upgraded as my needs dictated. I'm now using a Canon 5D Mark II which has HD video (I think we all know that by now), but the camera also creates a 30mb RAW file every time I snap the shutter. So, write speed is very important. I WAS using the Extreme IV series cards (45mb/sec), and even with the slower 4fps in the 5D2, the camera would hang after a few shots to write the data. Now with these new 16gb Extreme cards I get to hold down the shutter button and record WAY more images before the buffer starts to hold things up. What an improvement! This new series is worth every dollar. Remember, faster cards also give you longer battery life since the data writes faster, so that's another plus to these new Extreme cards. They are UDMA level 5 which is nice (the 5D2 handles up to 6). BTW, UDMA simply means that the card does a lot of the file processing, which gets you faster write speed. Non-UDMA cards make the camera do all the work when writing images to the card. If you have a UDMA-enabled camera, by all means get UDMA-enabled cards.

One last thing to help clear confusion on the card naming format: the 133X and 300X and all that simply means the speed that the card can write data. SanDisk doesn't use that prominently in their marketing, they tend to say "30mb/sec" or "60mb/sec", like that. Lexar uses the ###X format all the time.

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