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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
Camera Labs D7000 Video Review
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<blockquote data-quote="jdeg" data-source="post: 10231" data-attributes="member: 1"><p>yeh, I doubt a firmware update would make the write speed faster. However, a faster memory card would definitely help. The table in the manual is based on a 8gb class 10 Sandisk extreme (30mb/s). The d7000 will support the new SDXC cards, which have a much greater write speed of 104MB/sec (which unfortunately are really expensive right now)</p><p></p><p><img src="http://img24.imageshack.us/img24/9196/d7000manual.jpg" alt="" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p><p></p><p>Keep in mind too, you would only experience a slow down in writing to the card if you are RAW and taking more than 10 shots at a time, in which case the buffer would fill and you wouldn't get the full 6fps. In all honesty, you won't need that kind of performance unless you are shooting something that is super fast action, like sports.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jdeg, post: 10231, member: 1"] yeh, I doubt a firmware update would make the write speed faster. However, a faster memory card would definitely help. The table in the manual is based on a 8gb class 10 Sandisk extreme (30mb/s). The d7000 will support the new SDXC cards, which have a much greater write speed of 104MB/sec (which unfortunately are really expensive right now) [img]http://img24.imageshack.us/img24/9196/d7000manual.jpg[/img] Keep in mind too, you would only experience a slow down in writing to the card if you are RAW and taking more than 10 shots at a time, in which case the buffer would fill and you wouldn't get the full 6fps. In all honesty, you won't need that kind of performance unless you are shooting something that is super fast action, like sports. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
Camera Labs D7000 Video Review
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