Look For Sandisk Retail Pack Sdsdb 512 A10 Upc at Amazon
| Most helpful customer reviews 619 of 634 people found the following review helpful. SanDisk’s 512MB SD card is by far the cheapest available. In most cases, the other cards are at least 50% more than this one.
I was curious about speed since SanDisk is known for being a bit on the slow side. This card was relatively newly released when I wanted it, so I was unable to find any good speed figures online. Therefore, I bought it anyway — and ran the speed tests myself.
Testing on a Toshiba/AudioVox Genio e550G with Kai’s Speed Test application, I ran the Write Test 5 times with the following results: Not very consistent, for some reason. I was not running any other applications at the time, so I am not sure why the fluctuation.
For comparison, here are the results using a Lexar 256MB SD card: So, at their best, the two cards seem quite comparable. It is just that the Lexar card is clearly more stable as far as speed fluctuations go.
In any case, I’m happy with it — especially for the huge difference in price in most cases. Works for me. Plus, 5-year warranty — just in case.
– John…
—UPDATE— For comparison, here are the new figures for the 512MB SanDisk card: As you can see, the card is now performing at or above the speed of the 256MB Lexar that I had previously tested. I am now quite satisfied with this card — it appears to be giving the same speeds or better than other cards well above this price range.
– John… 26 of 26 people found the following review helpful. I have the Canon SD450 and the highest resolution I take pictures is 1600×1200 which turn out as outstanding prints on photo paper. I take close to 200 photos every month. but since I download then to my computer (or IPod if I am on the road) I do not run out of memory space ever. I weighed out my options with 1gig cards but ultimately it only means that I can take more pictures at a stretch. Look at it this way if you buy 2 512 Mb cards you have the simple flexibility of keeping your photos separate, have a backup memory card rather than buying one 1 gig card which if it fails you are stuck with no memory at all. You can get this product for under $30 if you search well enough and find good deals. I have three of these at an avg cost of $32 each. 27 of 28 people found the following review helpful. The SanDisk SDSDB-512-A10 512MB Secure Digital Card, like most 512MB cards, will store on average 568 pictures when used with a 2 megapixel camera, 426 images when used with a 3 megapixel camera, 256 pictures when used with a 4 megapixel camera, 204 images when used with a 5 megapixel camera, and 160 pictures when used with a 6 megapixel camera. These numbers are based off the assumption that you are going to shoot your images at the highest quality JPEG setting available for the camera and understand that they are estimates and may be off by as much as 10 percent due to numerous factors including the complexity of the scene being shot and the compression algorithm used by your specific camera. I truly hope this review was helpful to you in determining whether this 512MB card is the right capacity for your specific needs. |





