As far as UHS-II, I have used Lexar and Transend with good results and write over 200 and read over 250. I like Transend because they make chips and are not just a re-lable company. Not sure about Lexar, but they are a solid reputable brand.
I just came across your video while searching reviews for Sandisk card. Thanks to you, I just placed an order for prograde card. they are giving 5 year warranty on prograde here in Sweden.
Pro Grade Digital are the executives of their former comany Lexar, who they sold to a Chinese company, at the time lexar were the best. Pro Grade keeps up that tradition
Hi, I'm looking at upgrading my camcorder to a Sony AX53 as I want to start filming in 4k, my guess is to shoot up to 30 minutes of footage, nothing crazy. Would 128mb Pro Gear suffice? Or would you recommend 2? I shoot short films as a hobby. Thank you!
On my sony FX3 depending on which 4k settings I chose I get anywhere from a hour and 15 minutes all the way up to 2 hours and 40 minutes with a 128 gig card, so if you are looking for 30 minutes the 128 gig should be good. Personally I still use two of them though since the fx3 has dual card slots so I always shoot redundant just in case. Hope that helps, thanks for watching.
Fantastic, absolutely no issues, I use the SD cards in this video regularly, Id say I completely fill them up and then start over at least once maybe twice a week. They did so well in fact, that I went ahead and purchased Pro Grade Micro SD cards for all of my GoPros and they have been working great so far too. I highly recommend the brand.
I had an SD Card sketch out on me in a phone, is it better to use cloud storage than the SD Card or is pulling things down off the cloud more time consuming and problematic than using a fixed card?
Thats hard to say as it depends on the codec you use. My Sony FX3 has multiple 4k codecs and the bit rate varies drastically, which impacts the total capacity quite a bit. With the fx3 i can go from 10minutes record time up to 5 hours all depending on the codec/bit rate.
It will work on most settings but not all, the highest settings on the a7s3/fx3 are too demanding for any sd card and require cf express. With that said, this card is fast enough for most modes on the camera including the lower bit rate 4k 120p.
DO NOT GET PROGRADE CARD..THEY FAIL!!! ON MY SECOND CARD N ALL MY FOOTAGE MYSTERIOUSLY DELETED FROM MY CARD.. B&H HAS SEEN AN INCREASE OF PPL ALL HAVING THE SAME ISSUE PROGRADE BRAND
For a R5 I would say the faster the card the better, the R5 can shoot some pretty intensive video codecs so I would say the 300mbs will be better for you. I personally use only the Prograde cards now as I love the speed and the price is better, plus so far reliability has been great.
Congratulations on the video... I'm going to buy the sony fx30 and I don't know which capacity to buy... 128.. 256... I need to know an AVERAGE number of minutes I can get on 128... and 256gb... to be able to make my purchase. could you give me a hint. buy 2 of 256gb... or 01 of 512gb... I'll record videos of courses... average 40 minutes... for more...
Personally I went with the 128gb as in general, when doing photo or video, I dont like to have cards that are too large just in case I have a card failure. IE if I have two 128 gig cards and one fails I lose half my data, where is if I just had one 256gig card and one fails I lose all my data if that makes sense. From a time perspective it really depends on a number of factors, what FPS you are shooting in, what resolution, what bit rate, and so on....but for me I would say on average I get about 2 hours and 20 minutes on a 128gb card on my Sony FX3 when shooting in 4k 24p.
What SD cards do you use?
You should try the new sabrent SDcards
@@Duvan_Prieto I haven't heard of them, I'll have to check them out.
I use Prograde Digital v90 128gb on my mirrorless cameras. I used to use Sandisk prior and now used as backups.
Prograde 128gb v60 x2 for my sony a7riv
As far as UHS-II, I have used Lexar and Transend with good results and write over 200 and read over 250. I like Transend because they make chips and are not just a re-lable company. Not sure about Lexar, but they are a solid reputable brand.
I just came across your video while searching reviews for Sandisk card. Thanks to you, I just placed an order for prograde card. they are giving 5 year warranty on prograde here in Sweden.
Thank you for watching Gaurav! Im happy my video was able to help you make a decision. Enjoy your cards!
Thanks for the honesty in the video and quit beating yourself up
You're working so hard man and I can see the quality. Wait for it I'm sure your channel will boost up.
I appreciate that, thank you!
Pro Grade Digital are the executives of their former comany Lexar, who they sold to a Chinese company, at the time lexar were the best. Pro Grade keeps up that tradition
Hi,
I'm looking at upgrading my camcorder to a Sony AX53 as I want to start filming in 4k, my guess is to shoot up to 30 minutes of footage, nothing crazy. Would 128mb Pro Gear suffice? Or would you recommend 2? I shoot short films as a hobby.
Thank you!
On my sony FX3 depending on which 4k settings I chose I get anywhere from a hour and 15 minutes all the way up to 2 hours and 40 minutes with a 128 gig card, so if you are looking for 30 minutes the 128 gig should be good. Personally I still use two of them though since the fx3 has dual card slots so I always shoot redundant just in case. Hope that helps, thanks for watching.
How’s the status now on pro grade after 7 months
Fantastic, absolutely no issues, I use the SD cards in this video regularly, Id say I completely fill them up and then start over at least once maybe twice a week. They did so well in fact, that I went ahead and purchased Pro Grade Micro SD cards for all of my GoPros and they have been working great so far too. I highly recommend the brand.
Thanks for the video. Made my decision easier.👍
No problem! Thanks for watching!
I had an SD Card sketch out on me in a phone, is it better to use cloud storage than the SD Card or is pulling things down off the cloud more time consuming and problematic than using a fixed card?
Depends on your file size and internet speed, in the case of large video files, local storage is better.
how much 4k video footage can you put on these cards
Thats hard to say as it depends on the codec you use. My Sony FX3 has multiple 4k codecs and the bit rate varies drastically, which impacts the total capacity quite a bit. With the fx3 i can go from 10minutes record time up to 5 hours all depending on the codec/bit rate.
Does this work shooting all intra on sony a7s3 ive tried it and i still get the warning to get better sd card
It will work on most settings but not all, the highest settings on the a7s3/fx3 are too demanding for any sd card and require cf express. With that said, this card is fast enough for most modes on the camera including the lower bit rate 4k 120p.
@@FifthNorth thanks for the response 💯i read a forum online about someone trying it on memory slot #2 and it works! like why is that the option 😂
DO NOT GET PROGRADE CARD..THEY FAIL!!! ON MY SECOND CARD N ALL MY FOOTAGE MYSTERIOUSLY DELETED FROM MY CARD.. B&H HAS SEEN AN INCREASE OF PPL ALL HAVING THE SAME ISSUE PROGRADE BRAND
can prograde V90 record XAVCS 4K 120 fps?
I have recorded 120fps on my Sony FX3 without issue, hopefully that helps.
Is sandisc 128 gb 200mb/s good for canon eos r5 or prograde 128gb 300mb/s better ?
For a R5 I would say the faster the card the better, the R5 can shoot some pretty intensive video codecs so I would say the 300mbs will be better for you. I personally use only the Prograde cards now as I love the speed and the price is better, plus so far reliability has been great.
Congratulations on the video...
I'm going to buy the sony fx30 and I don't know which capacity to buy... 128.. 256...
I need to know an AVERAGE number of minutes I can get on 128... and 256gb...
to be able to make my purchase.
could you give me a hint.
buy 2 of 256gb... or 01 of 512gb...
I'll record videos of courses... average 40 minutes... for more...
Personally I went with the 128gb as in general, when doing photo or video, I dont like to have cards that are too large just in case I have a card failure. IE if I have two 128 gig cards and one fails I lose half my data, where is if I just had one 256gig card and one fails I lose all my data if that makes sense. From a time perspective it really depends on a number of factors, what FPS you are shooting in, what resolution, what bit rate, and so on....but for me I would say on average I get about 2 hours and 20 minutes on a 128gb card on my Sony FX3 when shooting in 4k 24p.
Thanks