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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D750
Folder and file management
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<blockquote data-quote="voxmagna" data-source="post: 494973" data-attributes="member: 38477"><p>Thanks for your replies.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Because when I am travelling it is the fastest way to show photos or get some quick prints done on the move in the supermarkets. I don't always carry a PC to process RAW and JPEG is still the quickest best universal format to pass photos to a friend or email. Transferring 200 RAW photo files from a Sandisk Extreme Pro card takes a long time even via USB3. The smaller JPEGS take no more than 30 seconds. But I always save RAW files, to process later on the PC.</p><p></p><p>At the moment I have 2 X 64 Gb Sandisk Extreme Pro cards @ 95Mb/s which is plenty. Copying the larger RAW files across to HDD takes the time. I have learned that fast cards are not just for multi shots, but enable large RAW and MOV files to be transferred faster off the card. I test all my cards for speed. There are plenty of fake cards out there with very poor read/write transfer speeds. Unfortunately, these can give cameras a bad name when users think they have fast cards but they are not. It is not about the interface either. A fast USB3 card reader is no good if the card is slow and running multi-shot tests with the D750 soon tells you if the card is good enough. </p><p style="text-align: left"><span style="color: #000000"></span></p> <p style="text-align: left"><span style="color: #000000"></span></p> <p style="text-align: left"><span style="color: #000000"></span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="voxmagna, post: 494973, member: 38477"] Thanks for your replies. Because when I am travelling it is the fastest way to show photos or get some quick prints done on the move in the supermarkets. I don't always carry a PC to process RAW and JPEG is still the quickest best universal format to pass photos to a friend or email. Transferring 200 RAW photo files from a Sandisk Extreme Pro card takes a long time even via USB3. The smaller JPEGS take no more than 30 seconds. But I always save RAW files, to process later on the PC. At the moment I have 2 X 64 Gb Sandisk Extreme Pro cards @ 95Mb/s which is plenty. Copying the larger RAW files across to HDD takes the time. I have learned that fast cards are not just for multi shots, but enable large RAW and MOV files to be transferred faster off the card. I test all my cards for speed. There are plenty of fake cards out there with very poor read/write transfer speeds. Unfortunately, these can give cameras a bad name when users think they have fast cards but they are not. It is not about the interface either. A fast USB3 card reader is no good if the card is slow and running multi-shot tests with the D750 soon tells you if the card is good enough. [LEFT][COLOR=#000000] [/COLOR][/LEFT] [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D750
Folder and file management
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