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Gear / Technical Help => Recording Gear => Recording Media => Topic started by: Jamos on September 20, 2006, 10:30:54 PM
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So in another thread there was a discussion about how the newer, faster SD and Compact Flash cards write data in a "burst" mode, rather than a continuous writing mode...and how this could lead to dropouts or problems when writing large, continuous audio files. It was recommended that slower speed cards would be more ideal for audio, and the faster cards are better for things like photography.
I'm looking at buying a 2GB SD card for my new R-09, and have seen older cards that are 45x, and new cards that hover around 130x.
What is the ideal card speed to buy for audio?
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the microtrack is the only recorder i have seen people flat out say slow is better for
others like the hd-p2 people have used 120-150 and had no probs
:/
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You may as well get a 4gig for the r09. The transcend one works well for me and quite often you can find them for less than $70 on sale. That way no worries on swapping batteries or cards during a show. I think the transcend one that I have is 150X
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You may as well get a 4gig for the r09. The transcend one works well for me and quite often you can find them for less than $70 on sale. That way no worries on swapping batteries or cards during a show. I think the transcend one that I have is 150X
I'll probably get a 4GB eventually, but for now a 2GB card can be had for around $30...
I've heard folks say that the 150x cards work fine for them, but I wonder if that is really the ideal speed.
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Doug Oade told me stick with the 2gb cards. swap them out as needed as redunency is best ... don't put all yer egges in the same basket yer sure to lose all at some point >>> agin this is all I M H O only..
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I just stumbled upon this thread which has some good info:
http://taperssection.com/index.php?PHPSESSID=dc5cb19c3eae03a2a98a47d2a8b6b290;topic=68824.0
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Remember... Your talking about SD cards and not CF. Not everything works the same between the two. Two different technologies.
The 2 gigs are cheeper but these cards are really small. I was going to go and get a few 2 gigs but am pretty paranoid about possibily loosing one when when switching in a show. Shoot... After a beer or two sometimes I can't find my mini LED flashlight and thats a good deal bigger.
I agree in some ways about not putting all your eggs in one basket and do that for my digital camera. However, Solid state media fails very rarely. I've been usining it in cameras and now recorders for at least 5-6 years and never had one fail. Also, there have been several shows I've been to that a single set recorded at 24/48 would fill the 2 gig card. No way I want to swap that card out of the R-9 in the middle of a set. In between sets bothers me enough.