Travel? Card Reader/Storage?
c18913
Registered Users Posts: 11 Big grins
I'm going to Belize and Guatamala for two weeks in August. I don't want to have to take a laptop.
So, my questions for you globe trotters....Has anyone had good luck with a card reader/storage device? What kind? What's your best recommendation for getting photos off my 20d's memory cards?
Thanks!
--Christy
So, my questions for you globe trotters....Has anyone had good luck with a card reader/storage device? What kind? What's your best recommendation for getting photos off my 20d's memory cards?
Thanks!
--Christy
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I would assume the newer models have better batteries. Also just handy after the holiday to have a portable HD of that size on your desk.
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Here's what I use
http://dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=32462
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A few questions - do these have color preview screens? Or is the LCD display more of a status providing interface?
What about failure rate. Has anyone ever had the device "successfully" load all of the images from their card, only to find out later that there isn't anything on the drive? Or that the files on the drive are corrupted? It would be heartbreaking to travel with a device like this counting on it's reliability only to get home and find out that you didn't have the photos from your trip!
Mary
Mary, this is a concern of mine also. I do not really trust any of these devices.
I do use an Epson P-4000 and I really like it. The review screen is nice also.
But I would NEVER trust my files to be stored ONLY on it.
I always record the files on the P-4000 and somewhere else whether it is on the hard drive of my laptop or DVDs os somewhere.
The price of Compact Flash cards continues to fall, so sometimes I just carry a few extra cards and do not erase them until I return home and have archived them on my hard drives at home.
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Nobody who knows anything about hard drives expects them to be 100% reliable.
I have read that because the Hyperdrive is more affordable, some pros carry two on their belt. Each card is offloaded into one, and then the other. The chance of both drives failing simultaneously is low.
If you happen to have the additional equipment, space for disks, and can spare valuable travel time for disc burning, you can do what other pros do which is offload a card into the device and then also burn the same card to a DVD that is mailed home.
to chimp though. Carry two batteries.
I built my own device because then I had the freedom to put in a HDD which I trust. In this case Seagate. I dont know what they put in those readymade things, but in what I assembled, I know its a genuine seagate notebook drive and chance of faliure is less.
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TSK,
Would you mind sharing your method for construction?
Thanks,
ziggy53
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
Just follow the link in his/her earlier post (http://dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=32462) :
It doubles as AA battery charger and CF card reader.
I've never had it lose pictures, but I've only had it a couple of months. So far I haven't had to erase the CF cards before verifying on the PC that I got all my pictures, but I came close last weekend and I had a hot flash just thinking about it.
It has a tricky user interface, so I had to keep the manual handy until I got used to it.
You can't see the pictures with it, you can only count the files.
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Its his
And its a similar solution to hyperdrive. You can fit your own HDD. If you are spending a lot of money on that trip, spending 80$ extra on a backup HDD is not a problem.
Get two HDD's and copy files on both. There is a very very slim chance, that both disks will fail catasthropically.
Same problem of faliure can happen with CF cards, Laptops, even the camera, so there is a risk, but having 2 HDDs will cover you from hard disk faliure pretty well, and when you have spent 2000$ on a trip, an extra 80 wont really hurt.
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Having worked in IT for over ten years (the early ones doing desktop support), I've rebuilt desktop machines and am quite familiar with hard drive reliability. I've had some that have worked faithfully for years - other's that have been nothing but trouble. Funny thing - is the seagate drive in my desktop machine at home failed shortly upon arrival. Then the replacement drive failed! The third one has been running well for a few years now.
When I posted that question, I knew someone was going to give that answer. What I was really looking for was any feedback on their level of reliability - has anyone encountered persistent problems? Have they had to have their drive repaired/replaced? Or have the drives for the most part been fairly reliable?
With any of these electronic devices, we risk failure. Heck - my camera could fail halfway up a Ugandan mountainside. I realize I won't get 100% reliability out of any of my equipment. I was simply hoping to get feedback from current users of the equipment.
I may just bring along a drugstore, 35mm, throwaway camera. In case I have MAJOR equipment failure!
- Carry as many 2GB+ CF cards as possible
- Download from the CF cards to a P-2000
- Recycle the CF cards only if I absolutely have to
- When I get back to the hotel (base of operations), download from the P-2000 to a laptop.
If I never re-cycle the cards, I have 3 copies of each image. Of course, on long trips/vacations, it's hard to afford the requisist number of cards.I've had the P-2000 for about a year and have had no problems with it (yet).
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The only failures I've ever read about was a couple during early days with the PD70X--and that was due to old, dying drives being put in them. Fresh drives were put int & they worked flawlessly.
I will soon be upgrading the drive as I have filled it a couple of times and have some longer trips scheduled later this year, so 40GB isn't enough. The swap will be simple. BTW, mine shipped with a Samsung drive in it, but you can order an empty & put whatever you want in there.
In any case, to directly answer the OP question: The HD80/PD70X has basically been dead reliable & I have no reason not to trust it.
I applaud the motivation on that DIY rig, but I personally would not trade. The separate drive, reader, and battery parts seems like such a PITA in comparison to the single unit device made for the purpose, not to mention several added failure points.
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The Hyperdrive hard drive is user-replaceable or even available with no drive, you add your own 2.5". If I had to choose between a home-built device and a Hyperdrive, I'd choose the Hyperdrive because its drive interface, control software, and power system are designed and tested as an integrated unit for the specific purpose of reliable photo transfer, and you can read all about it on their site. And the AA batteries are much more flexible than the lithium-ions in the units that have a battery-draining screen.
I'm not saying you haven't carefully specced and tested yours, only that they probably spent a lot more time and resources perfecting their design for demanding pros.
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Hmmm, looks like they have it online, too.
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How about RAW files? I understand that this device doesn't allow you to view the images. Have you found that to be a problem? I could wait to see the photo's, but if I dont have my laptop I wouldn't be able to see the photos in my room. Do those of you who have the EPSON make use of the viewing, or is it just an unused option?
I realize the price difference too. THanks, this has been a most informative post.
Greg Good
Grand Rapids, MI
I charged it twice in 3 weeks, although the second time was not really necessary. A useful feature not mentioned is that it can be used as a reasonably fast charger for AA batteries.
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Because it's not trying to display photos, it doesn't care WHAT the files are. Truly, they can be anything--it's just copying data. RAW is fine. I don't need to see the shots until I get back to my PC for processing, all I need is a big "bag" to dump them to so I can continue cycling my CF cards.
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It will show me my RAW files but only because the RAW file has an embedded small JPG in it. Therefore you cannot zoom into a RAW file, you can only zoom into JPG's. Also note that as new RAW formats come online you will need to update the firmware in the device to show the new RAW files. Yet another reason why proprietary RAW files are a bad idea.
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