User Reviews Send this to a friend
PNY Optima 16 GB SDHC Class 4 Flash Memory Card P-SDHC16G4-EF
 
Manufacturer: PNY
Customer Rating:
 
List Price: $56.99
Sale Price: $32.99
Availibility: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Now or  Check It Out...
 

Product Description

16 GB Class 4 secure digital high-capacity card ideal for the latest digital cameras and recorders. Please verify that your device such as cellular phone or digital camera supports SDHC cards. SDHC cards are not compatible with standard SD host devices and card readers, and will only work on SDHC host devices. Check with your device manufacturer to see if the device supports SDHC before purchase.

Product Details

  • Class 4 Performance
  • Minimum 4 Mb Per Second Write Performance
  • Ideal For Latest Digital Cameras & Camcorders
  • Record Video & Images, Download Music & Store Images
  • It has a memory of 16 Gb

Video Reviews

No video reviews found for this product.

In a hurry?

Don't forget to Check the sale price for this product.

Customer Reviews

Plenty of legroom for everybody
 
Review Date: June 1, 2007
Reviewer: Ellie, North Shore of Boston, USA
This SD card is for devices which are capable of using the HC standard which greatly increases the speed of read and write operations. If you don' know for sure that your device (camera, pda, etc.) uses that newer standard instead of the older SD card standard, hold off buying it until you know for sure.

That said, it has worked perfectly in my new Panasonic DMC-FX50 digital camera. Four gigabytes is a LOT of storage to have on a tiny card for your camera or other device. It allows me to shoot nearly an hour of VGA quality video from my camera or shoot over one thousand 10 megapixel photographs.

Since we feel we can never have enough storage space for our digital memories, that's fine with me. At this very low price, getting this card from a major manufacturer is a tremendous bargain.

Recommended.
Premier storage for premier devices
 
Review Date: December 3, 2008
Reviewer: Nathan Beauchamp, Oak Park, IL USA
PNY, although slightly less well known than Kingston or Transcend, makes some very fine SDHC cards. This one is no exception. At 32GB, this card can store an amazing amount of data in a very small package. (Anyone else remember when having a 20gb hard drive in a laptop was considered cutting-edge?) However, there are some things to consider before buying this particular card (or any other 32gb SDHC card).

1. This is NOT an ideal card for a digital SLR like a D80, D90, Rebel XT, etc... That is because it is a class 4 device. The class of a SDHC cards has to do with how fast they read and write files, not how much storage they have. For a digital SLR, you should purchase a class 6 SDHC card most of the time. Class 6 cards will allow you to take 'bursts' of photos and not be limited by the card's capacity to write them. Also class 4 cards are slower reading data, meaning they will take longer to upload files to your computer. Upload speed is convenient, especially when loading large batches of files.

2. This card has far more storage than you need for your digital camera. Unless you like to keep all your photos on a SDHC card and never move them to your computer, there is very little need for more than about 8gb of storage space on a SDHC card. (The possible exception to this is if you have a D700 or other professional SLR that shoots files in the 16-20mb range). If all you intend to use this card for is a digital camera, save yourself a lot of money and buy a PNY 8GB SDHC Card. If you're worried about running out of space on a vacation, buy a few of them.

So what is this card intended for? This card is fantastic for use in a video camcorder capable of writing to an SDHC card. (Check with the manual first to insure that a class 4 card will be fast enough first). It is also perfect as extra storage for an ultra portable computer or net book like the Asus EEE pc. Another great application would be as added storage to a personal media player or MP3 player equipped with a SDHC slot such as the Cowon D2.

That said, this is a fantastic SDHC card with a breathtaking amount of storage. PNY makes quality products (I swear by their computer memory) and I think their SDHC cards are easily as good as more recognizable brands. If you have a need for the space, pull the trigger and get one. You'll be glad you did.
32 GB of space for video
 
Review Date: July 26, 2008
Reviewer: Agnius Griskevicius, Santa Monica, CA USA
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R1K4OAXFM7TZNH My take - it is all good so far!
Details: card is made in Japan, it is class 4 (which translates into 4 megabytes per second transfer rate), works well with Canon VIXIA HF100. For now, it is the most spacious card I could find, and it is reasonably priced per megabyte. Although, I am sure, I will be laughing at myself spending that kind of money on this capacity couple years down the row... Price to pay for progress of technology - complimentary obsolescence. I hope it is fast enough to keep up with the future models of camcorders and higher recording bandwith. Right now Canon VIXIA HF100 and its cousin HF10 max out at 17 MB/s, and that is before AVCHD compression kicks in. Next generation of camcorders will top out at 24 MB/s, - HF11 is already announced in Japan. So hoping that Class 4 will be good enough for next wave, although I might skip generation or two till manufacturers make more significant improvements that would affect my workflow. Now I need to update my computer (MacBook) to speed up conversions of AVCHD files... Demanding peripherals will drive computer hardware sales and vice versa. Never ending cycle! So time to start gathering my pennies and venture over to Apple Store.
SDHC cards not compatible with SD
 
Review Date: October 13, 2009
Reviewer: T. Cogar,
SDHC CARDS ARE NOT COMPATIBLE WITH SD DEVICES. YOU MUST HAVE A DEVICE THAT SUPPORTS SDHC TO USE SDHC CARDS. SD CARDS ARE NOT THE SAME AS SDHC CARDS.

Numerous incorrect ratings are faulting SDHC cards for not functioning properly. It is very apparent that the buyers are not selecting the correct product for their devices. This problem includes the SD card reader devices - users complain they can access the SDHC cards while the cards are in their device but the card ceases to function in their PC reader.

I fault the Sandisk consortium that agrees on design and standards for SD cards. When the SDHC card was developed the consortium designed it with an identical physical appearance (minus the HC logo) to the standard SD cards - knowing full well that the tech is not reverse compatible. I also fault users for not paying closer attention to their purchases. Most SDHC outer packaging I've seen notes that SDHC cards are not compatible with straight SD devices - different manufacturers just make it more or less prominent on packaging.

Additionally, the primary manner in which SDHC cards are rated, by class, is very misleading. Class (Class 1, Class 2, Class 4, etc) dictates a minimum write speed rather than a range. The SDHC manufacturers tend to omit the actual write speed while advertising the card class - which may be very low or high compared to the indicated class rating. Capacity is the typical consumer focus for many users but there are many interested in actual write-speed performance. This dictates whether or not the card throughput will bottleneck and slow a device - especially important in DSLR cameras and HD cameras where the device will simply slow or stop functioning until the card catches up.

The Class rating system creates unusual situations where cards rated in lower Class can outperform cards in a higher class. Thus the off-brand companies will advertise a 16gb card for a fair margin cheaper than Sandisk or Kingston equivalents. However, the latter (Sandisk & Kingston) products will perform significantly better in use because they both write faster despite similar class ratings. Off-brand SDHC cards are fine so long as the associated device doesn't demand faster performance and the user does not mind suspect quality control.

This PNY product works adequately and can keep up with my Canon 450D/XSi full JPEG burst to about 40 consecutive photos at 1/2000 shutter. RAW format fetches 6-10 consecutive photos on the PNY outpacing my Sandisk Ultra II (Class 2) by about 2-3 photos - expected results. However, the 450D has a limit of 3.5/sec for RAW burst which may now be my limiting factor. I may try the Sandisk Extreme III 30 MB/s at a later date once the price comes down.

Buyers with more demanding devices (such as Canon 50D, 7D, 5D, etc.) may wish to look towards a faster card.
Memory for memories.
 
Review Date: August 17, 2008
Reviewer: Jeffrey Skonecki, Portage, MI United States
for the price was simply the best deal. Works well with my camcorder (9Mbs) to record video directly to flash memory. Only recommendation is if you wanted to put it directly to your computer to download upload you might need a new card reader, not all of them work with the 32 GB cards.

In a hurry?

Don't forget to Check the sale price for this product.
  • Share/Bookmark

Related posts:

  1. Transcend 8 GB Class 6 SDHC Flash Memory Card with USB Card Reader TS8GSDHC6-P2
  2. Kingston 4 GB SDHC Class 4 Flash Memory Card SD4/4GB
  3. Kingston 8 GB SDHC Class 4 Flash Memory Card SD4/8GB
  4. Transcend 8 GB SDHC Class 6 Flash Memory Card TS8GSDHC6
  5. Kingston 8 GB Class 4 SDHC Flash Memory Card SD4/8GBET
  6. Transcend 16 GB SDHC Class 6 Flash Memory Card TS16GSDHC6
  7. Transcend 4 GB SDHC Class 6 Flash Memory Card TS4GSDHC6
  8. Kingston 16 GB SDHC Class 4 Flash Memory Card SD4/16GB
  9. Transcend 16 GB SDHC Class 2 Flash Memory Card TS16GSDHC2 (Red)
  10. SanDisk 4 GB Class 2 SDHC Flash Memory Card SDSDB-4096-A11

Tagged with:

Filed under: Review

Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!