I know that I can just use the slower rated cards but me likes to know why this is required because would seem to me that if these speeds like 120mb/s are Maximums that they would be backwards compatible and work with the camera while seems to me that it would be the 30 & 90 mb/s that would be having the problems. Its as if for some reason these cameras do not like and will not function correctly with cards that are faster than 90mb/s. I also have some Sandisk Ultra 30mb/s circle 10 cards which work just fine in every Browning camera that I have. The only solutions are to fix the broken pins through replacing the broken pin with an enamel wire or soldering a. 1 pin probably broke when you swapped out the sd card reader and now the switch is at 5mb/s compared to the normal 40 mb/s. The 120mb/s is an ImageMate with 1 in U and 10 in circle. It sounds like your switch is in 1 bit mode because of Nintendo's shitty design on the sd connector. The 90mb/s is an extreme with 3 in U and 10 in circle. All cards are being formatted as FAT32 per Browning's recommendations and are then having the Browning's DELETED ALL function ran against them to eliminate any existing data/videos from them, again this is per Browning's recommendations.īoth cards are Sandisk and both are 32gb size and both are SDHC. Tap the three dots in the upper right corner. Under 'Boot Selection', select Non-Bootable. Tap the SD card name to open the Files app with the SD card selected. You should see the SD card under Device, if not click on the drop down menu to select it. Nothing wrong with the SD card because it functions fine on my desktop and laptop computers.ĭon't think there is anything defective about the cards because works fine with multiple slower 90mb/s cards and does NOT work with multiple 120mb/s cards. Any SD Card with a capacity greater than 32 GBs will only have official support for exFAT. Complete the installation of the software on your computer. What I am ultimately trying to determine is WHY a trail camera would function fine when using a 90mb/s SD card but would NOT work with 100% (give bad file errors and lockup, in that, its menus would not function correctly and it can neither be turned on or off at times), when using a FASTER speed / 120mb/s SD card is placed in the camera. It was working fine and I could store my files on but instead of going to delete them, I just formatted it on the Samsung Galaxy s3. of the data going from the camera to the SD card, when the trail camera is recording a video onto the SD card ? In other words, does an SD card have a "controller" on it, similar to a convention/old style mechanical computer hard drive or is the flow of data to the SD card strictly the job/function of the hardware in the trail camera ? Hello, Today I received my Sandisk Ultra 64gb MicroSD for the 2nd time since the first one was faulty. While you can try to format it to FAT32, due to limitations in the partition type, this can lead to massive sector sizes on large capacity drives, which can make it unstable or unusable on various devices with easy FS corruption, or for devices that depend heavily on SD cards, crashes and FS corruptions. If an SD card is placed in say a hunting trail camera for the recording of video data, which device (the trail camera or the SD card) contains the "data controller" which determines the flow speed, etc. Any SD Card with a capacity greater than 32 GBs will only have official support for exFAT.
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