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32GB CompactFlash Memory Card UDMA Speed Up to 60MB/s Camera CF Card for Professional Photographer,Videographer,Enthusiast

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$28.80

$ 11 .99 $11.99

In Stock

About this item

  • **Durable Design - Backed by rigorous stress, shock, and vibration testing and includes RTV silicone coating for protection against shock and vibration
  • **32GB CompactFlash High-speed performance - leverages UDMA 7 technology to deliver a read transfer speed up to 600x (60MB/s)
  • **Captures high-quality images and extended lengths of stunning 1080p full-HD, 3D, and 4K video with a DSLR camera, HD camcorder, or 3D camera
  • **Video performance guarantee (VPG-20) for full HD
  • **Warranty - Backed by a lifetime limited warranty



Product Description

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cf card
cf card

Darryl Hill
Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2024
This card was made to look like the SanDisk Extreme, which I also own, shown in picture. It also appears to have the same specs. I did a bit of testing, and I wouldn't call it scientific, but basically, I put one card in and shot continuous until the buffer filled, and I couldn't shoot any more, then did the same with the other. The San Disk, at a 1/2 shutter speed was able to get 24 shots, while this card is only able to get 18. At higher speeds, 1/250, they performed about the same with this card stopping at 8 and the SanDisk only getting and additional one at 9. I am shooting on a Nikon D800E at full resolution raw files. That said, I don't do any highspeed photography and so either card will suit me just fine. A lot of photographers don't trust unknow name brands as they fear losing photos. Unfortunately, in the short term, there is no way to test this. I will continue to use this card and report back if I have any issues.
Cheap & Picky
Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2024
Fits nicely in my DSLR, a great addition to my camera bag. Plenty of storage space for shooting in RAW.Comparable quality with name brand memory cards I have, no complaints so far.
MSWS
Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2024
I've tried this out in my DSLR and haven't experienced any significant lag time or other issues. It works just as well as my name-brand cards and is great to have on hand as a backup just in case I fill my primary memory card.
David Lloyd
Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2024
this works great. It looks and functions like the name brand for a great value. It was instantly recognized and for all intents and purposes, I cannot tell that it isn't one of my name brand cards. Since it is for one of my older DSLR's, I felt like it was worth the chasing of it. I ma happy. I will try and come back and update if there is a failure.
Chase P.
Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2024
What is there to say? The camera formatted it, saved images to it, and the computer read it.
OtakuN3rd
Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2024
I tried with two different card readers and was not able to get the claimed 60MB/s speed rating, but I was able to get close to 25MB/s.This is a good card to use with an IDE converter on older computers instead of relying on an old hard drive.Many systems from the 90's don't do more than 33MB/s on the IDE controller, and can't use more than a 32GB hard drive.Capacity-wise, it isn't playing any funny games like some flash memory does, but it is a little less than 32GB (but that is fairly typical).
Michael Harper
Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2024
If it looks like a duck...and if it walks like a duck....then is it actually a duck?Silly as that is, this is an age-old question.In the case of this card...so far, it walks like a duck.I have a couple of vintage Olympus DSLR cameras. They aren't worth much, but they are special, because 20 years ago, camera companies were in a competition to produce a digital SLR camera whose sensor was the most like film. The goal was complete realism while maintaining a particular "look" for each camera company.Every few years, the sensor technology would improve, and the upgrades happened so fast, a lot of people missed the beauty that each sensor could capture. You can still use those old cameras now to get some unique tones and colors that you can't easily get with modern cameras.I thought I better get one of these cards before nobody makes them at an affordable price any more.Those old cameras use CF cards. Back then, you were a real player if you had a 2 gig card. If you had a 3 gig card, then you probably drove around in a convertible wearing sunglasses with the top down.This card is 32 gigs. Back then, it would have cost over $100. I plugged it into one of those Olympus cameras, and it said I had 9,999 shots available. I took 20 pictures. It still said I had 9,999 shots available!My concern was, will it be compatible? The answer is yes.It takes and stores images just like the SanDisk. I uploaded a picture of the 32 gig SanDisk card this is modeled after just for kicks (and legitimate comparison).The other image is a SanDisk card and the card I'm reviewing, side-by-side, and next is the card I'm reviewing, in package and out of package.They provide you with a pretty substantial little case, much like what you expect with the SanDisk cards.Stay innovative with your image production my friends.
Reviews and Information
Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2024
Just avoid. The VPG20 badge is an outright lie, it couldn't reach 20MB/s writes in any test I ran. Best was about 12MB/s. The label is misspelled as Compact"Flah". Not the first one of these I've seen, but is it the worst. A real, genuine, major name-brand CF card of the same capacity and a true MUCH higher speed is readily available at the same price. Don't bother with these ripoffs. It gets two stars only because the capacity checked out as true, so in a pinch it works as Extremely Slow storage.