Compact Flash Card (CF Card)

Compact Flash is now the preferred memory card for professional videographers using digital video cameras. Secure Digital memory cards (SD Cards) are used in just about every type of portable device available, from digital still cameras, video cameras/camcorders, and tablets, to cell phones and smartphones. SD cards tend to be much cheaper than CF cards, but CF cards tend to be faster and more durable than the smaller fragile SD cards. SD cards are easier to misplace or damage, but if you keep your memory cards in a memory card wallet (as you should) it shouldn’t be an issue.

A CompactFlash card is a memory card created by SanDisk in 1994 that stores data on a relatively small portable computer using flash memory technology. It has no moving mechanical elements and doesn’t require a data retrieval battery. Small memory cards allow a wide range of computing devices for consumers to add data. CF cards today are mainly used by higher-end digital imaging and video cameras as interchangeable memory.

The initial CompactFlash card was developed by using NOR flash memory. NOR flash has the benefit of remotely executing storage programs without copying them into a computer’s random-access memory framework. NAND, however, is more suitable for vast volumes of data storage and is the default form of flash memory found on all disposable memory cards, including the CompactFlash card and the Stable Digital (SD) card.

Since the flash is non-volatile memory, whether the power supply of a computer is switched off or destroyed, stored data is preserved. The solid-state architecture features of a CF card make it more durable than most conventional storage units. For a CF card, the operating shock level (basically, the height from which they can be lowered and still work) is 2,000 gauss (G) as opposed to a 100 G to 200 G level for a standard portable computing device’s mechanical drive. This applies to a decline from 10 feet to the floor versus a single foot for the electronic disc drive.

For use with digital single-lens reflex cameras, CompactFlash is a common alternative card. Ultra-CompactFlash (Ultra CF), a high-end variant, is designed for more difficult shooting, such as a short shot sequence of high-resolution photographs or photos of a moving subject

Technical specifications and vendors

CF cards measure 42.8 mm by 36.4 mm based on the Parallel Advanced Technology Attachment interface and are available with storage capacities ranging up to 512 gigabytes. CompactFlash cards allow service of 3.3V and 5V and can switch between the two. This differs from other flash memory small form factors, which can only run at 1V. There are two types of CF cards with different thicknesses to fit different capacities: Type I CF cards are 3.3 mm thick vs. 5.0 mm for Type II cards. A Type II CompactFlash card’s extra thickness is that almost all of them were Microdrives, created by IBM, a tiny rotating hard disc format.

SanDisk is now one of the world’s biggest CF card manufacturers, but it has a lot of rivalries. Cards from Kingston Technologies, Lexar, and Transcend Knowledge are regularly receiving good ratings from digital imaging websites.

CompactFlash Association and Compliance

A CF card is self-tested for interoperability by the CompactFlash Group’s member manufacturers, founded in 1995. The organization comprises 80 members and mostly works on the demands of both the technical photo and video industries and the manufacturing industry.

Cards that complete this testing are marked as follows:

CF 4.1a: Goods are commonly available at speeds up to a sequential access limit of 90 megabytes per second.

CF 5.0: Goods provide more effective commands that have a constant speed and facilitate TRIM operations.

g>CF 6.0: Implements Ultra Direct Mode Access 7, which provides up to 167 MB/s of bus speed and supports the Sani

In addition to setting CF and CFast card standards, the CFA implements the standards for the latest removable flash memory card format, XQD. XQD cards connect with the much quicker PCI Express bus instead of connecting with a PATA bus on a CF card or a SATA bus with a CFast card.

Additional flash memory card formats

New flash memory card formats have been developed to store and upload files, images, and songs between constantly declining devices in physical size. For instance, several types and capabilities come from Safe Digital memory cards that are governed by the SD Association (an industry body close to the CompactFlash Association). The dimension of the SD cards is 32 mm by 24 mm by 2.1 mm. Due to their cut-corner appearance, they are easy to spot.

In many computer implementations, SD cards have replaced the bulkier CompactFlash card because of their smaller scale, lighter weight, and lower cost. An SD card can be up to half the CF card’s cost with an equal data storage capacity, depending on the vendor and variables such as read / write speed.

WHICH MEMORY CARD IS BETTER, A COMPACT FLASH OR AN SD CARD?

CompactFlash (CF Cards) was first produced in 1994 by the SanDisk company and quickly became the go-to portable mass data storage device. CompactFlash cards are physically a little bit larger than other formats and are still one of the most reliable mass data storage units in the market.

CompactFlash is now the preferred memory card for professional videographers using digital video cameras.

Secure Digital memory cards (SD Cards) are used in just about every type of portable device available, from digital still cameras, video cameras/camcorders, and tablets, to cell phones and smartphones. Since being designed and distributed by the SD Card Association in 1999, the number and styles, and manufacturers of SD cards have exploded.

Secure Digital memory cards are significantly smaller than CompactFlash cards and are equipped with a nine-pin interface as compared to the 50-pin interface of the CompactFlash. The result of having fewer interface pins means that the SD cards are limited to a four-bit data bus, whereas CompactFlash cards have a 16-bit data transfer bus.

While this sounds like it would make CompactFlash cards the better choice because the Secure Digital cards’ transfer speed is slower, in reality, and here is the answer to the question, the difference is negligible due to advances in digital camera technology.

But the question runs deeper…

Your camera decides which memory card you have to buy… So the question that I think is more relevant is the writing speed of the cards.

For me, because I shoot in RAW, and a lot of times shooting in burst mode, I look for cards that write the fastest so that the processor in my camera does not buffer and write the images while the action is happening in front of my lens.

The reality is that the faster the speed of the card, the more money comes out of your bank account. But regardless of the money, this is my job, and within reason, money isn’t my first deciding factor. For me, here is my memory card of choice… For an SD card, it is the 32 GB SanDisk Extreme PRO Plus and for a Compact Flash card it is the 32GB Lexar Professional 3400x CFast 2.0 card

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