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SanDisk Extreme III CompactFlash is designed for serious professional photographers who demand one of the fastest, most rugged, and most durable memory cards on the market. Professional photographers who work under less than ideal conditions expect more from a flash memory card. More speed. More performance. More reliability. SanDisk's new Extreme III card delivers everything you want plus a whole lot more!
That's because only SanDisk Extreme III memory cards feature innovative ESP Technology for the fastest speeds and highest performance. ESP stands for "Enhanced Super-Parallel Processing". Simply put, it means you are getting the fastest read/write speeds available an amazing minimum 20MB per second sequential read and write speed speed you'll definitely appreciate whenever you find yourself shooting and storing pictures in harsh environments, extreme temperatures or at high altitudes.
Every SanDisk Extreme III CompactFlash card comes with RescuePRO so you can recover images, documents, mail, video, music just about any digital file, with ease. Built with leading-edge media recovery algorithms, RescuePro lets you preview recoverable data before you try to retrieve it. With RescuePRO's unique recovery algorithm for MPEG audio and MPEG video recovery (MPEG-1/2/3) what you see, and what you hear, is what you can recover.
Rely on SanDisk Extreme III cards when speed is critical to getting the right shot.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
80 of 84 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Make sure you get the 2008 version of this card!!!,
This review is from: SanDisk SDCFX3-016G-A31 16 GB Extreme III CompactFlash Card (Retail Package) (Personal Computers)
SanDisk has pulled a fast one on us who are accustomed to the Extreme III & IV series. They've updated the Extreme III series with a new "2008" spec model. Yeah, so what... Well, the 2008 spec Extreme III 16GB CF card is almost twice as fast as the original "20x" Extreme III 16GB CF card in my Nikon D3. In fact, the 2008 16GB model is just marginally slower than my Extreme IV 8GB card in my D3. This speed increase makes a big difference for me when shooting motorsports in RAW mode and hyperactive children. Even crazier still, as of this review, Amazon is selling the 2008 spec Extreme III 16GB card for ~$15 less than this much slower model.
Do yourself a favor before buying one of these cards and see how it will perform in your camera first... google for "Rob Galbraith CF performance database" and look up your camera. Buy intelligently!
30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Works great in the new Nikon D300,
By TWB "Moofer" (Sunnyvale, CA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: SanDisk SDCFX3-016G-A31 16 GB Extreme III CompactFlash Card (Retail Package) (Personal Computers)
I just purchased the Nikon D300, and found that my "old" 4 GB SanDisk Ultra III CF card wasn't gonna cut it in this beast. Low and behold - the 16 GB is now shipping. The price was great, it arrived a day early, and I couldn't be happier. The Nikon formatted it without any issues at all. Here are the number of images the D300 (12.3 MP) can write to this card:
RAW - 606 TIFF - 423 Fine (JPG) - 1400 Normal (JPG) - 2900 Basic (JPG) - 5800 RAW + Fine - 430 RAW + Normal - 503 RAW + Basic - 549 Read/Write performance is excellent, and I look forward to not swapping cards out anymore. The two were made for each other.
67 of 77 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
This will work in a Canon 20/30/5D,
By
This review is from: SanDisk SDCFX3-016G-A31 16 GB Extreme III CompactFlash Card (Retail Package) (Personal Computers)
You can't format the card in the camera. The camera in theory only supports 8gb cards, but it will recognize the 16gb card. HOWEVER, it will format the 16gb card as 8gb.
If you use a card reader attached to a computer to format the card, it will remain at 16gb and the camera will continue to see it as 16gb. Word of caution... for most situations, multiple smaller cards are better. It's great you can get 1000s of images on a single card, but what happens if the card fails? Even high quality cards fail. 16gb cards are great for high-end uses, but for normal shooting (particularly if it's over several days) you really should use smaller cards. I do time lapse photography, so I shoot several thousand frames over a few hours. The card works great for this. Would I use this to shoot a weeks worth of vacation photos? No way. Use smaller cards for that and offload them to the computer frequently.
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