IF you buy a DS and have a few SD cards, THEN buy a D, you are not necessarily in a bad position. There are several vendors offering SD- >CF card adapters that allow you to use your SD cards in CF cameras, with a 10-20% performance penalty. This is not so bad as it seems since the D has relatively slow write performance anyway: the card plus adapter is not the bottleneck.

If you have a D and then buy a DS, that's a bit of a pain as you have to buy SD cards: there's no adapter possible that will allow a CF card to be used in an SD slot.

However, storage cards are reasonably inexpensive and generally a one- time purchase. Two 1G cards rated at 45-60x, in either CF or SD format, are a little less than $160. That's ten rolls of film plus processing, less than two/three weeks film consumption for me, and you can reuse the cards for many thousands of cycles.

Godfrey


On Sep 6, 2005, at 3:24 PM, Shel Belinkoff wrote:

OK, thanks ... there's some sense in what you say. However, first I must spend some time with a properly set up and working DS to know better how I like digital and what features I really want and need. I shall keep your
comments in mind when/if the time comes to get a second body.

Shel



[Original Message]
From: Dario Bonazza
Subject: Re: Decisions, decisions...

In other words, if you need say 1GB (max.), you have to buy 2 GB (1 GB CF

+

1GB SD) for having 1 GB wit any camera (in case one fails, in case you

are

continuing using one for some reason, etc.).

Dario

----- Original Message -----
From: "Shel Belinkoff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 06, 2005 11:45 PM
Subject: Re: Decisions, decisions...



I don't see what difference it makes. I shoot different brands and types
of film.  Why don't you think it a good idea?

Shel



[Original Message]
From: Dario Bonazza <



Shel,

I don't find to be a great idea mixing SD and CF, unless you truly need

some

D specs.









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