20Mar/105
16GB Secure Digital Sdhc Card Class 10
- Durability - 10,000 insertion/removal cycles
- Compatible with SD Specification Ver. 3.0
- Mechanical Write Protection Switch
- Supports Speed Class Specification up to Class 10
- Supports Copy Protection for Recorded Media (CPRM) for SD-Audio
Product Description
Transcend High Capacity SD Card series are specifically designed to meet the high capacity, high definition audio and video requirement for the digital cameras, DV recorders, mobile phones. The speed class enables the host to support AV applications to perform real time recording to the SD memory card.... More >>
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March 20th, 2010 - 17:28
It was an easy and uneventful experience dealing with this vendor. I always feel safe ordering through Amazon and their vendors.
Rating: 5 / 5
March 20th, 2010 - 18:00
This memory card is really good. It was found to be of high quality and right speed for the kind of digital applications that it was intended for.
Rating: 5 / 5
March 20th, 2010 - 20:16
What more do you need!! 8GB for around $24, class 10 SDHC, 20 Mb/s speed. The Sandisk Extreme III 30Mb/s sells for $53 and this is less than half the price.
I ordered one for my Nikon and it works like a charm. The speed advertised on the packet is 20 Mb/s. 8GB on my Nikon DSLR (12 MP) gives around 2100 photos, JPEG format, with largest photo size and normal quality. Hope this helps people who are looking for a cheap, fast and reliable SD (SDHC) card for their DSLRs.
Rating: 5 / 5
March 20th, 2010 - 20:56
I bought this card for my Canon T1i. The card I had been using before ordering this one was a Kingston Class 6 micro sd card and it worked well enough for the type of shooting I did. Class 6 was the card speed that Canon recommended when I bought my T1i (Class 10 cards were not yet available) and it seemed fast enough for the way I used my camera – isolated single photos taken at Medium (8 MP) or Large (15 MP) jpg settings and 1280 x 720 video. And while I ocassionally took continuous photos, I had never much exceeded 5-10 photos in a row and had never run into a problem with my Class 6 card.
When I first saw the Class 10 cards I did some experiments with my camera. How many continuous Large photos could I take before the camera slowed down? It turned out to be about 30. And how many RAW photos could I take before the camera slowed down? It turned out to be about 9. SInce I did not generally take any photos in RAW and never needed more than about 10 continuous photos at Large, the Class 6 card seemed more than sufficient for my needs. But I wondered about the speed of the Class 10 cards enough that I finally bought one.
It turns out that the Class 10 card is sufficiently fast that there does not seem to be a reasonable upper limit on single Large photos. I have taken 60 on continuous without an issue. And although I still cannot take more than 9 RAW photos on continuous with the Class 10 card, when I am finished taking those photos the camera no longer displays a Wait – writing pictures screen. The RAW photos get written from the built-in memory to the card so quickly that the camera does not need to display the Wait screen.
So this card is fast! Given the way I take photos this purchase was unnecessary, but still I am glad I bought it. I know I will not run into a situation where speed is an issue with this card.
Rating: 5 / 5
March 20th, 2010 - 22:39
I bought this 16 GB SDHC card for my Canon EOS Rebel T1i SLR camera and it is a perfect match. The card is fast and the images are both beautiful and bright. I highly recommend this memory card.
Rating: 5 / 5