Customer Reviews: Read 45 more reviews...
Finally!!! Affordable Capacity!!! January 7, 2008 Lito (New York, NY) 141 out of 144 found this review helpful
Transcend 16GB SecureDigital SDHC Class 6 Card with Bonus SD Card Reader Best thing about vacations is that they give you the perfect reason to go out and buy new toys!!! I'm heading to Costa Rica for 8 days of adventure and after looking fondly at my Canon SD850IS, the first thing I thought was, "I'm going to need more space". The one mistake I made when I purchased my 2GB SD card was underestimating how much video I'd take with this little camera (which this camera is surprisingly good at). With the activities we have planned for CR, I needed to be certain that I'd have enough memory to capture all those crazy adventures (Volcano hikes, zip lines, canopy tours, white water rafting, scuba diving etc...) * So how much does it store? At max resolution here are the capacities: Pictures: 8MP at Superfine resolution: 4,496 pictures Video: 640x480, 30FPS, 127 minutes and 38 seconds!!! 30 seconds of continuous shooting with no flash at max res: 34 pictures (Canon claims 1.4 shots per second). Please note, I got identical results with the my Sandisk Extreme III 2GB SDHC * Transfer Performance Test Bed: 340MB Video File, USB hub, on my desktop (AMD X2)...Each test was repeated 5 times and the average taken (what can I say, I'm OCD :D) Using the supplied SD card reader: 17 seconds (20 mb/sec) Connecting directly to the camera: 50 seconds (6.8 mb/sec - i.e. in line with the Class 6 rating) Using the SD card reader and going through my laptop (IBM T41P): 29 seconds (11.7 mb/sec) In other words, depending on your hardware it meets and/or exceeds the speed rating. I also own a Sandisk Extreme III 2GB SDHC card, which boasts a faster transfer rate. The only test above that it performed better in were transfers to my laptop (22 seconds vs 29). It would appear based on the transfer rates that the camera was the limiting factor, but with the supplied SD card reader, that limitation is a non issue. I'm lucky - I found this card on a lark, and the day after I bought it, the price rose $30. Considering this product was announced Nov '07 and just released, not to mention the competitor's are priced about $50-$100 more, the price I paid for it was just too good to pass up. So with all that said: Pros: - Price (~150mb/$) - Performance is in line (and meets or exceeds) with its class rating - 2 HOURS of VIDEO WOOO!!!! Cons: - It's new and unproven. The only question that remains is whether or not it will hold up over time...if anything changes in the next month...I'll let you know :) Enjoy!!!
Truly Droolworthy Technology March 22, 2008 Edmond E. Seay III (Brussels, Belgium) 41 out of 42 found this review helpful
Transcend offers a great combination -- a 16 GB SDHC card and a truly compact card reader -- for an extremely competitive price. There are 16 gig SDHC cards on the market for more than three times the money. The reader also allows me to interchange the 16 gig card with a Transcend 8 gig SDHC card that I bought separately, which increases the versatility of both items. But wait, there's more. ;) I own an ASUS EEE PC computer (Asus Eee PC 4G (7 Screen, 800 MHz Intel Celeron Processor, 512 MB RAM, 4 GB Hard Drive, Linux Preloaded) Pearl White) that comes with a built-in SDHC slot to enhance on-board hard disk capacity. With the 8 gig Transcend card, and the 16 gig card and the reader it comes with, I can use both if I want to slap 24 super-portable, solid state gigs of fast memory on my EEE when I'm traveling. I've run both cards through the SDHC slot without problem, and using the card reader, I've also tried both from all 3 of the built-in USB slots and from USB hubs attached to each of the 3 USB slots as well. Bottom line? They work great -- and especially with the ASUS EEE PC. Good job, Transcend -- highly recommended.
Fast and stable. You may have to download KB934428 HotFix from Microsoft to make it work in your integrated card reader. February 13, 2008 Anonymous (United States) 40 out of 41 found this review helpful
Fast and stable. You may have to download KB934428 HotFix from Microsoft to make it work in your integrated card reader. ( I can't provide the web link to the HotFix because Amazon filters web links, you can search for KB934428 at Google and get a direct link for download / you'll have to validate your copy of Windows before download) We don't use this card in a camera, we use it to back up or XP system partitions when using Ghost or Acronis and our throughputs have improved tremendously compared to imaging the %systemdrive% to even another internal SATA drive. The included adapter is a bonus and it has an orange status light to display read activity. Five Stars !
HiDef Video March 15, 2008 C. Johnson (Mississippi) 15 out of 15 found this review helpful
Have to give this one all five stars. I've been recording video with a Panasonic HDC-SD9 camcorder at the highest resolution 1920x1080 @ 60i, thats 60 interlaced frames per second, I really expected this flash card to give me problems because of the low price, but to its credit I've been able to record approx. 2 hours of nonstop video with no hicups. Very solid product, I currently own two of them.
Transcending SanDisk June 14, 2008 R. Overall 14 out of 14 found this review helpful
I use SanDisk Extreme III (Lumix FZ50) in my professional work, and Ultra II (Lumix TZ5) in my snapshots and most vacations. At the time, the 8 Gb was excellent, and could hold more pix than I would ordinarily take. Wanted to try a 16 Gb, and couldn't find an Extreme, though it was listed, so when I saw the Transcend, thought I'd try it. A friend had the 4 and 8 Gb, and liked them. So I bought, and so far, though it doesn't officially have the weather capabilities of the Extreme, I can't tell the difference in speed of r/w, and find no difference in pic quality. For significantly less money, for non-wilderness/severe weather use, the Transcend appears to be every bit as fast and as good as the SanDisk. The card reader it came with is not quite as nice as the SanDisk's, but so far (3 months of use) works just as well. The 16 has more capacity than I've been able to fill so far, but that just means I don't have to switch cards midstream, and can take marginal pix in addition to primaries, and edit what doesn't come out well. I will consider Transcend along with SanDisk in the future, and unless there is a clear technical advantage, will go with Transcend's lower price.
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