- READ & WRITE PERFORMANCE: Up to 60MB/s (400x) for serious performance gains.
- UDMA: UDMA 5 enabled (works in all UDMA modes)
- TEMPERATURE: Tested to perform from -13°F to 185°F
- DURABILITY: Shock protection and RTV silicone coating added inside for protection against moisture and humidity
- WARRANTY: Backed by rigorous stress-testing procedures and our limited lifetime warranty.
Product Description
Get exactly the shots you want with professional-grade SanDisk Extreme® CompactFlash® cards. With up to 60 MB/s* read/write speeds, you’ll see it takes more than a great digital SLR camera to bring your ideas to life. And with 32GB of space, you’ll have room to capture it all in RAW+JPEG, and save the editing for later. SanDisk engineered its Power CoreTM Controller to take whatever your camera’s buffer can dish out. By distributing image data across the card more… More >>
SanDisk Extreme – Flash memory card – 32 GB – 400x – CompactFlash

3 Responses to SanDisk Extreme – Flash memory card – 32 GB – 400x – CompactFlash
John Brookes
June 23rd, 2010 at 8:35 am
screams and is reliable. ALSO, if you have a inexpensive usb adapter, you can use this chip as a 32 gb thumb drive to back up important files from your pc. When I’m in field, I use this for camera, then transfer to PC, and then at end of shoot back up pics onto chip for extra safety.
very useful.
Rating: 5 / 5
Michael J. Parlett
June 23rd, 2010 at 10:01 am
Just what I had beed waiting for for my HD video at a great price.
Rating: 5 / 5
S. Smith
June 23rd, 2010 at 11:11 am
Short story: the card is superb. If you are thinking of buying it, don’t hesitate.
Long story: Capacity is just shy of 30GB due to overhead. It it is v e r y fast; your camera will be the bottleneck, not this card! I tested in in 2 cameras: a newer Canon and an older Canon 20D. To my surprise, the large capacity works well with older cameras! Used with new cameras, there’s nothing to know other than it is fast and works as expected. Thus, the remainder of this review will be from the standpoint of the older Canon 20D.
I had been using an 4 year old Lexar Pro 8GB 133x WA (back then, fast and high tech & costly). The performance of the 20D has actually been greatly improved using this card. To the point, I would recommend upgrading to any brand of 400x card even if you don’t need the storage. There are no negative surprises but a few caveats to know for large cards in older cameras…
If you use large cards in older cameras, follow one simple rule: If the card is over 8GB, do not format it in the camera. It will be reduced to an 8GB card. If you ignore this rule, go to download dot com and search for this app: HP disk storage format tool
Because… Neither the camera nor Windoze can restore the card (not explorer, not disk admin, not XP pro, and not win7 entprise 64bit). But, the free HP utility is perfect. Newer cameras can format past 8gb. PS: I used a $12 usb card reader from Amaz to format mine: The Kingston 19-in-1 USB 2.0 Flash Memory Card Reader.
Rating: 5 / 5