Hello Mark,

maybe you just need a faster portable drive.  I specifically chose my
CompactDrive 60gb for speed of downloading cards.  I need them back
quickly.  I can dump a 1gb card to it in a couple of minutes.  Faster
than the *istD can write them out.  Once I got that, 2gb of CF cards
is enough for me.

-- 
Best regards,
Bruce


Sunday, February 27, 2005, 6:39:09 PM, you wrote:

MC> The speed really is the big issue. I can fire off a burst in RAW or JPG, but
MC> the down time between bursts is much greater with RAW.  I have only 2.5 gigs
MC> of cards (2 1 gigs and 2 256) and the X's drive II. But - it takes about 15
MC> minutes to dump a gig on the X's drive, and I would probably burn through
MC> the 70 shots per gig on the spare card that quickly. If I were to do more of
MC> this a couple of larger microdrives or CF cards would be useful - but I
MC> would still need the speed that shooting JPG's give.

MC> - MCC

MC> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
MC> Mark Cassino Photography
MC> Kalamazoo, MI
MC> www.markcassino.com
MC> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
MC> ----- Original Message ----- 
MC> From: "Herb Chong" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
MC> To: <[email protected]>
MC> Sent: Sunday, February 27, 2005 8:56 PM
MC> Subject: Re: colour shift under big lighting


>> well, i have 10G total space on my set of CF cards and single Microdrive,
>> 12G if i press into service some of my older CF cards. that's close to 900
>> frames in RAW. since i plan to get one of the 6G Microdrives, that would
>> make almost 1200 frames. i know one can chew up frames really fast at a
>> sporting event, but once you start getting up into that high an amount of
>> space, a portable drive unit with 20-40G of disk space with only two or
>> three 2G cards makes a lot of sense.
>>
>> Herb....
>> ----- Original Message ----- 
>> From: "Mark Cassino" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> To: <[email protected]>
>> Sent: Sunday, February 27, 2005 12:07 PM
>> Subject: Re: colour shift under big lighting
>>
>>
>>> You are right re RAW files. I should of mentioned that I shoot JPG at the
>>> swim meets,  mostly because I need the speed and to be able to hold lots
>>> of images on my CF cards. So, the process I described about locking in
>>> the white balance and then applying an adjustment curve in Photoshop is
>>> really only germane to shooting JPG's.  If you are shooting RAW you have
>>> the flexibility when you open the file, so it's not much of an issue.
>>
>>
>> 




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