The Prospec 32Gb UDMA 7 Compact Flash Card from Calumet – review
Because I’m something of a photographic ‘old fart’ and have been taking images for a living since before the venerable A1 was a glimmer in some Canon engineers eye, I treat everything new with suspicion!
Back in those days when we shot on film, suspicious gits like me had our favourite films we used. These were whittled down from the vast array on offer, not only on the basis of their performance, but also on reliability.
Did the sprocket holes tear in a particular camera – if they did then to avoid imminent disaster you’d never put that film in that camera.
Were the ‘tails’ always taped to the cassette spool? Christ, that one nearly cost me a boat-load of money at a wedding once – both bride and groom were barristers!
Thank the Lord we don’t have problems like that any more.
But CF cards come with their equivalent problem – card failure.
CF cards are basically Flash RAM, just like SSDs in the latest computers. And as such they are prone to some degree of instant failure over time.
The Way I Use Camera Storage Media
When I’ve finished shooting something I move it from the camera storage to my main imaging machine as soon as possible. Once the shots are on the computer, the card goes back in the camera and is immediately reformatted.
Back when the D3 was Nikon’s flagship I’d had some clonking failures of Lexar CF cards and Sandisk Ultras, when Kevin Treadwell at TFC Birmingham put me on to Delkin cards – and I have never had a problem with them………(see footnote)…
And the two original 16Gb Delkins I bought for the D3 are still going strong to this day!
So when I eventually moved to the D4 I wanted a 32Gb Delkin UDMA 7 to go with the 32Gb Sony XQD, but I couldn’t locate one anywhere.
I was moaning about this to Stuart Tudor-Wood at Calumet Birmingham and he suggested I tried their own Prospec 32Gb UDMA 7 instead.
Can you imagine what the “suspicious old photography fart” in me was saying; I was used to possibly the most reliable memory on the planet, and the priciest; and here was something I’d never heard of, and costing pretty much the same..
I did manage to walk out of the door without paying for it, so that was a small victory – but it only lasted 3 weeks until I was doing another workshop there – he nailed me for it the minute I walked through the door!
So, here we are, two years later. The other day I realised how long I’d had this card in regular use. It’s a mighty rare occurrence for me to have a day shooting long lens action and not generate some use of the CF card.
Even if I’ve only shot to the XQD card, force of habit leads me to format both cards one after the other.
And if I’m going to shoot video I shoot that to the XQD and then remove it if I want to shoot stills, which consequently go to the CF card.
When I’m testing lenses and shooting for workshop slides etc I shoot to the CF card, then stick that in my steam-powered laptop – it can never see my XQD reader and I daren’t even think about asking it to accommodate tethered shooting..
I bought the card a new brother so I had two of them in the 1DX when I went to Norway in February this year.
All in all, looking back through all the image batches I’ve shot I reckoned that this one card had been reformatted 981 times in a selection of camera bodies from a 1DX and 5DMk3 to a D4S, D4, D800, D800E and D810.
In the D4 this card allows me to shoot 41 14bit uncompressed raw files before I hit the end of the camera buffer; which let’s face it, is plenty.
So I promptly set about shooting 20 bursts of 41 frames, wiping the card between bursts, just so that I could say with some degree of certainty that the card had just hit its 1000th reformat.
Now THAT is a good, solid and highly reliable card that has put up with more abuse in the last two years than some of my clients would give their CF cards in a lifetime.
What Do The ‘Hieroglyphics’ All Mean?
I must admit to being somewhat ambivalent to the majority of these speed numbers – at the end of the day, as a photographer you are more interested in sustained write speed than you are in read speed – or at least you should be.
The faster the write speed of the media the longer it takes to hit the end of the camera internal buffer – this means you shoot more sequential frames in a burst.
This logo means the media is compliant with the CFA’s CF6 specification, which is supposed to provide data transfer rates of 167Mb/sec.
But that quoted transfer rate could be either read or write – they never seem to commit!
CF6 specification means UDMA 7 compliance; whereas UDMA 6 equated to CF 5 specification and transfer speeds of 133Mb/sec.
CF cards have to communicate with a host device – in our case our camera; and UMDA is the most efficient and fastest mode of communication. But not ALL cameras are UDMA compliant. And those that are might not be UDMA 7 compliant.
If a camera is not UDMA compatible then believe it or not, a slower non-UDMA card might make the camera work faster. If you put a UDMA 7 card in a camera that is only UDMA 6 compliant then that’s fine, but communication between the two will be at UDMA 6 speeds.
The moral here is to check your camera specifications, and available firmware upgrades.
What does 1010x mean? Known as the card Commercial X Rating it’s an indication of read speed more than anything else, and basically relates the speed of the card as a multiple of the old CD-ROM standard of 150KBs. So 1010x equates to 151.15Mbs.
But here’s the thing; none of these speeds, theoretical or otherwise, are derived via a camera – they are all acquired on a test-bench computer and a variety of card interfaces.
There is a simple if slightly ‘rough ‘n ready’ test that you can do to check the camera/media combo write speed:
- Set the camera to its fastest RAW shooting frame rate (Canon 1DX users note, that’s NOT 14fps!).
- Set the burst length to 30 frames.
- Put the camera in manual mode, auto iso, and set the shortest shutter speed.
Get a stop-watch and be prepared to start it when the ‘data write’ indicator lights up.
Press and hold the shutter button to start the burst of exposures, take your finger off the shutter button when the camera stops shooting. The indicator light will still be on, and the stop watch should still be running. Stop the clock when the light goes out!
Multiply the number of frames by the size of your RAW file, then divide the result by the time in seconds and you’ll have a rough value for your data write speed in Mb/sec.
In a Canon 1DX the Prospec 32Gb UDMA 7 CF card chugs away at a highly respectable 69Mbs write speed.
32Gb of storage with great reliability and ‘real world’ write speed like that is great – especially for the price.
Nikon Users
If, like me, you mainly shoot uncompressed 14 bit RAW (not an option for Canon shooters) the write speed of the Prospec 32Gb UDMA 7 CF card in a D4/4S will drop to around 41Mbs due to the much increased file size of each RAW frame – 35.9Mb average RAW size, as opposed to the 1DX average file size of around 26.4Mb.
But sensible burst shooting in conjunction with the huge Nikon D4/4S buffer means you will never suffer from ‘buffer lock-out’.
Conclusion
Bearing in mind that this is just my opinion, the Prospec 32Gb UDMA 7 CF card represents exceptionally good value for money. Yes, there are faster cards out there; but I’ve been bitten by both S****** and L**** in the past, and ‘once bitten twice shy’ and all that……
For me the write/format longevity of this card is what strikes me the most, and for the price this card is well worthy of anyone’s consideration.
Footnote
I’ve just had it confirmed……..the Prospec is actually Delkin; so bearing in mind what I said earlier, the reliability comes as no surprise!
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