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Which Card?
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<blockquote data-quote="PapaST" data-source="post: 125029" data-attributes="member: 8330"><p>I first try to look at what Nikon has listed as an approved card. I checked the D7000 approved cards and the Sandisk is there but the Lexar Professional SDXC card lists a "dash". Will the Lexar still work??? I'm guessing it would. </p><p></p><p>With video I would go for a 32GB card and use your second slot for redundancy. Write speeds are critical so I would purchase the fastest card feasible. Use the card and see how it performs under heavy stress tests. Use a program that tests the write speeds and compare that number to how it performs in the real world. That will tell you whether the speed is good or if you need to step up. </p><p></p><p>I try to buy from reputable companies with hopes that I'm not buying a fake. I don't really have loyalty to any certain brand. Most of my cards are Sandisk Extreme's and Transcend class 10. All serve me well.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="PapaST, post: 125029, member: 8330"] I first try to look at what Nikon has listed as an approved card. I checked the D7000 approved cards and the Sandisk is there but the Lexar Professional SDXC card lists a "dash". Will the Lexar still work??? I'm guessing it would. With video I would go for a 32GB card and use your second slot for redundancy. Write speeds are critical so I would purchase the fastest card feasible. Use the card and see how it performs under heavy stress tests. Use a program that tests the write speeds and compare that number to how it performs in the real world. That will tell you whether the speed is good or if you need to step up. I try to buy from reputable companies with hopes that I'm not buying a fake. I don't really have loyalty to any certain brand. Most of my cards are Sandisk Extreme's and Transcend class 10. All serve me well. [/QUOTE]
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