tbh every v60 uhs2 will do the trick. some are considered better to rely upon than the others. depends on what you are aiming for and your camera needs. you shouldnt be buying overkill cards for your camera and vice versa. I'm using a uhs 1 v30 from sandisk (256gb) and it works like a charm with my A7C. Of course if you have a uhs2 card its more reliable also with a no backup card slot (will be fixed in A7Cii) - but X3 the price. V30 for 4k vids is quite enough with the A7C.
amazon sells lots of fake products. Fake or counterfeit batteries are all over amazon. Most of them are junk and dont even come close to the capacity on the label.
have issues with original sony batteries. When I put it into my camera, my camera doesn't recognize it. It recognizes my old batteries but not new sony batteries. Any idea why that could be?
Hi, thanks for watching, this video was takin without any picture profile as I wanted to see how good are bad perform Sony a7c! And post editing was done, but very little so I can say that video is straight out from the camera.
Hi thanks for watching. Most of the time Hub is plugged in to MacBook and only if I transferring som files and charging at the same time, with hand feels little warm! But so far I don't have any issues with it, and I still would recommend it's small compact and easy fits in my camera bag with out taking to much space!
Same story i had the camera, but after 5 minutes of 4k 24 and like 8 minutes of 1080p 24fps, i found is useless. Tryed insta go2 video quality is terryble and i realy like the size. In this category is no other camera just gopro hero 5.
I have a bad experience with this charger. After a few months went tits up. When inserting the battery in the charger the screen starts to flash. Warranty ? Yes but no answer from customer support until present day. Second unit same story , just a few months more of use. Charging was with the power brick supplied by the Nitecore. Worst experience ever. Now on the market for another charger.
I see that in your speech, there is a lot of confusion. You say your Sandisk extreme gives a recording error on your Sony camera? The problem is not one card is UHS i and the other is UHS II. The problem is that cards up to 32GB use the FAT 32 file system. Cards over 64GB are formatted in an EXFAT system. Do the following test and then tell me if Sandisk continues to fail. Try to format the sandisk in the PC, in EXFAT file format. Not in FAT32. Then put it in the camera and try to record until the card is full, and then tell me if the camera work fine or not. OK? Sorry for my English, but i'm using the google translator.
Hi Luis good point let me try to find how from my friends has Windows PC as I using Mac and I will try, as usual I do formatting on camera and never tried to do on computer, but is worth to try!!!! Thanks for suggestings!!!
@@thefelixdazz It is convenient to format on camera, but the camera recognises the diference between a SDHC card (FAT32) or a SDXC card (EXFAT). And the camera format always a SDHC card in FAT32 system files, wich has a máx. of 4 GB file. In a pc you can choose to format a SDHC card at FAT 32 or a EXFAT file system. Whem you bought a pendrive (above of 64 GB) or a a SDXC card they have been formated by default to a EXFAT system file. That´s the only diference between a SDHC and the SDXC card. It's the formating file. Try to format on a computer these SDHC sandisk at EXFAT system ant then try to record on your sony camera. There's no need to buy a UHS II card for these sony camera, because you don't need these extra speed, and is very expensive. Buy a sandisk extreme pro 64GB for 20 dollars or the 128GB for 40, 45 dollars. It's a very good card and is cheap, an does the job. Sorry for the bad english.
I believe the SDXC on the card (which is 64GB and up) is what makes it so it doesnt break up the video files to 4GB files on video.(from what I watched on another video, Gerald Undone) I believe you can get them in UHS-I but have to have the SDXC on them. Also V60 is sustained 60 MBps for "V" video.
Yup! 👍 the SDHC operates under a FAT32 filing system which has a limit of 4GB per individual file size. But as you stated - SDXC doesn’t have that limit as it uses the exFAT filing system and you can theoretically have as large a file size as you want without breaking up a single duration shot into separate files. And there are many cards in the market that use the UHS-1 interface paired with SDXC that allow for this capability. Which -honestly, in some cases, can be preferable since UHS-II tacks on some less-than-desirable added cost. (Especially if your camera/host product doesn’t even support UHS-II -… virtually a waist of money in those particular scenarios)