On 15 Apr 2007 12:59:51 -0700, BHawk wrote:
>> As fast as you like. But the camera won't write the photos any faster than
>> the maximal camera write speed.
>
> BHawk wrote: ditto to above I think... Yea, I read about that... the
> 4X, 8X, 16X seems to only have to do with the transfer rate from the
> chip to the PC.... transfer speed.
No, it can effect both transfer rates if the card speed is low
enough. Those 4x, 8x and 16x speeds are quite slow, but the CP885
is *very* slow writing to cards. Those are speeds you used to see
in cards about 6 years ago. Now most cards are probably close to
40x, with some I've seen as fast as 150x. My first camera memory
card was a "high speed" 48MB 4x CF card and sold for about $80.
These days you can get a card 20 times larger and much faster for
about $10. According to DPReview the CP885 took almost a minute to
write just a bit less than 10MB of images to its card. Unless I've
made a calculation mistake that would require about a 12x card to
allow the camera to write without slowing down. So your CP880 might
be held back if you're using a 4x or 8x card.
How many memory cards do you own? If they're a mix of speeds, you
may be noticing a slowdown over the years if you started with a
small 8x or 16x card and later bought a larger 4x card.
Alternatively, if you originally had the CP885 take 1024x768 Basic
jpg files and later started saving 2048x1536 Fine jpg files you
might also have noticed a slowdown. To see how fast the camera can
write images to flash cards you should try to buy or borrow a card
that's at least 16x, which shouldn't be too difficult as cards that
slow are hard to find these days.
>> Stay informed about: Nikon Coolpix 885 seems slow: Memory Type or Batteries?