Is this ok to use?

Danno

Senior Member
This is one of the things that I have not experimented with. I have stayed away from micro cards and used the fastest recommended cards.
 

Bikerbrent

Senior Member
Why when the full size and macro cards are the same price, why would anyone want to fool around with an adapter which is one more thing to lose and one more thing to fail.
 

Michael J.

Senior Member
Why when the full size and macro cards are the same price, why would anyone want to fool around with an adapter which is one more thing to lose and one more thing to fail.

That is a good question. This year I bought two smaller cameras and I got such cards free from the shop. It worked in those cameras, a Olympus TG-5 and a Nikon W100. I put the adapter with the Card in my main camera, an Olympus EM10 Mark ii that time, and it didn't work.

I now got the D7200 and I got a regular SD Card from the shop.
 

pnomanikon

Senior Member
I'm curious to find out. We just bought new cell phones yesterday, and I bought 64GB Micro SD cards (Ultra-High-Speed SanDisk on sale for $15) for them. The old phones had a 16GB and 32GB Micro SD card in them, and I thought I could keep the old cards (with adapters that came with the new ones) in the bag as a backup for my D7200 and my wife's D3100.

I will try them out as soon as my eyes un-dilate from my eye Dr appt this morning.

OK - 5 minutes of screen time is my limit right now. Ugghh

UPDATE: I just tried the old SanDisk Pixtor 32GB MicroSD card (with adapter) in my wife's D3100. Formatted it, then took about 10 photos with no warning lights or alarms.


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