mSummers
Member
I listened to an interesting podcast by renowned wedding photographer David Ziser. He had data recovery expert Scott Tallyn on his podcast today to talk about flash cards, hard drives and data recovery. I found a couple of things that Scott said about flash cards interesting and thought I'd share them here.
1. The projected lifespan of a flash card is approximately 10 years. According to Scott, if you bought a card today, put it on a shelf for 10 years and then put it in your camera, there's a good chance that it won't work. (this was something he had read in an article recently and hadn't found out why this is the case yet)
2. A flash card is only good for 100,000 read/write cycles (each time you take a photo is a read/write cycle, each time you view the image on the camera is a read/write cycle, each image being transferred to your computer is a read/write cycle, etc.). So, if you don't chimp, each image has 2 read/write cycles. Scott recommends that a full time professional photographer should replace their cards every 2 years.
3. Flash cards are susceptible to damage from static electricity, so you shouldn't just keep them in your pockets, you should put them in a case.
4. He also said that the cards are more susceptible to being corrupted by filling them all the way up, so you should switch cards when you're down to about 5 images remaining.
If you're interested in the whole podcast, here's the link to David Ziser's Blog. He has the podcast player imbeded on the right side next to the section listing the questions he asked Scott Tallyn
1. The projected lifespan of a flash card is approximately 10 years. According to Scott, if you bought a card today, put it on a shelf for 10 years and then put it in your camera, there's a good chance that it won't work. (this was something he had read in an article recently and hadn't found out why this is the case yet)
2. A flash card is only good for 100,000 read/write cycles (each time you take a photo is a read/write cycle, each time you view the image on the camera is a read/write cycle, each image being transferred to your computer is a read/write cycle, etc.). So, if you don't chimp, each image has 2 read/write cycles. Scott recommends that a full time professional photographer should replace their cards every 2 years.
3. Flash cards are susceptible to damage from static electricity, so you shouldn't just keep them in your pockets, you should put them in a case.
4. He also said that the cards are more susceptible to being corrupted by filling them all the way up, so you should switch cards when you're down to about 5 images remaining.
If you're interested in the whole podcast, here's the link to David Ziser's Blog. He has the podcast player imbeded on the right side next to the section listing the questions he asked Scott Tallyn
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