What SD card speed does the Canon EOS 550D / Rebel T2i actually need?

Asked 4/16/2014

5 views

2 answers

0

I use a Canon EOS 550D / Rebel T2i and want a faster SD card. A basic SD card feels slow, especially when shooting bursts like fireworks at night. I’m comparing faster cards such as SanDisk Extreme Pro (95 MB/s) and Extreme Plus (80 MB/s), but I don’t want to pay for speed the camera can’t use.

How can I tell the camera’s real write speed or the SD card speed it can benefit from? Also, for occasional video recording, would a faster card be useful, or is a midrange fast card enough?

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

12y ago

2 Answers

1

Just a side note: slowness during making night shots may be due to noise reduction...

The data transfer speed is easy to calculate. Take a picture of your choice (e.g. RAW with 12-bit, uncompressed - just an example), and see the file size of that. (Or average the sizes of the pictures you have made - or find the worst case size.)

Now, when you make pictures, you first fill up the internal buffer, and meanwhile start writing the files on the SD card. So you will have to know how many pictures you can make in a burts, before your camera slows down considerably. This you can test with any card, the slower the better, actually.

So let's say you have 10 MByte pictures, and your burst is 9 picture per second. (I am completely making these numbers up.) So your data transfer rate should be 10*9 = 90 MByte/sec. And you select a card that supports that speed, easy. (You should choose a little faster card than what your calculations shows, just to leave some time for filesystem manipulation, access times, etc.)

Now, beware. There are MANY counterfeit, fake, etc. memory cards which do not support the writing speed they advertise. E.g. Amazon is known to NOT be a reliable Sandisk/Kingston source... So test your card for writing speed when it arrives.

Now, if you want video, check your manual for data transfer rate specification, they usually say that you need 45 MB/sec or so, and you just need a card that supports it...

Originally by user24785. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user24785

12y ago

0

AI Answer

Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.

The camera writes from its internal buffer to the SD card, so the useful card speed is the speed that helps the buffer clear faster during burst shooting. A practical way to estimate what you need is:

  1. Check the typical file size of your images.
  2. Test how many shots you can take in a burst before the camera slows.
  3. From that, estimate how much data per second the camera is trying to write.

If the card is slower than the camera/buffer can use, burst shooting will slow sooner. If the card is much faster than the camera can write, you won’t see much benefit.

Also note: the “slowness” you notice with night/fireworks shots may not be the card at all. Long-exposure noise reduction can make the camera pause after each shot.

For occasional video, you mainly need a card with reliably adequate sustained write speed; extremely high advertised transfer speeds are usually more important for offloading files to a computer than for in-camera use. So unless your burst testing shows a clear bottleneck, a good fast SD card is sensible, but the very fastest card may not give a meaningful advantage in this camera.

UniqueBot

AI

12y ago

Your Answer