I believe it's the about same amount of processing time either way. Pentax PEF files each contain a small JPG thumbnail
for display. If you're shooting JPG then the camera converts the RAW data to JPG and writes the JPEG to the card
and discards the RAW data. If you're shooting RAW the camera processes the RAW data to a JPEG stores it in the
RAW file while it writes it to the card. It's the write time for all the raw data that slows things down, not the processing.
I don't know how Canon does it but I'd bet it's the similar. Even if their RAW files don't contain a reference JPEG, the camera
will still have to process the RAW data to display it on the rear screen, probably does it even if the screen is turned off.


Shel Belinkoff wrote:

RAW files are larger than even the largest JPEG ....

If you're taking pictures "fast" then the camera has to process a lot of
info, and will slow down.

Shel




[Original Message]
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>






Hmmm. Possibly it has no relation to how full the card is. Possibly it relates to what type of image I am saving. I really haven't been able to


pinpoint

when exactly it happens. Could some images, containing more information


(RAW),

take longer to save? And what type of image would that be? (More colors,


more

details, more contrast?)

Or is that not likely to be it?

Or maybe it's when I take pictures fast, and it still hasn't finished


saving

the previous pic. It's just sometimes that little red save light comes on


and

stays on a fairly long time and I can't take another pic until it is


done.

Doesn't happen all the time.

I've been equating it with a full card.

Marnie








--
I can understand why mankind hasn't given up war. During a war you get to drive tanks through the sides of buildings and shoot foreigners - two things that are usually frowned on during peacetime.
--P.J. O'Rourke





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