Colin McDonald |
June 15th, 2008 12:16 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bruce Foreman
(Post 893394)
I"ve got a pair of HF100's and when I get back from a shoot, make sure I'm grounded well, take the cards out of the camera(s) and copy the original .MTS files over to 2 external 500GB drives as well as the internal 500GB drive. These files on the internal stay there until I finish the project and no longer need to maintain it on the internal.
One of the externals gets disconnected and stored until the next "new project" files need to be archived.
So far no problems with any media. I use only SanDisk, and PNY. One other practice I have is to not merely delete files from the card nor do a "quick initialization". Every time I "clean off" the card I do a complete initialization.
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Thank you for explaining your workflow so clearly. When tapes finally bite the dust I will doubtless do something similar. Let me explain my apparent anti-card position.
I work in education, and have come across some difficulties in promoting the advantages of digital video as an educational tool. At present, a nervousness in certain quarters about the words "video" and "children" appearing in the same sentence required me to devise policy statements which are as robust as possible. Part of this involves keeping all original footage permanently so that it can be viewed if required. I presently have several hundred DV tapes going back to a time when hard drives were much more expensive.
I should realise that many (most?) people don't want/need to do this, and are happy to dump the original footage once the project is finished. In still photography, people tend to keep most of their photos after initial weeding out, and that is usually done on hard drive and/or DVD, so long term storage of data originally acquired on cards is not a new issue.
I still prefer the HV-30 because apart from the tapes bit, it takes cracking pictures, quite amazing for the price.
In fairness, I should state that I have never used a DVX-100.
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