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That depends largely on the megapixel count of the photos that you're taking. Short answer is a lot. As the megapixel count of your photos increase, so does the amount of space they occupy. But yeah, a lot of photos. And if you have a computer with you, it's easy to back up photos as you go.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It could hold up to 800-1200 if you use jpeg 500-700 if you shoot in Raw it just depends ..I shoot in jpeg while I am doing high school football
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I can get several hundred RAW files on a 32 GB chip. I prefer a 64 GB because I can shoot 400-500 shots in an outing and not have to worry about filling my card, even though I carry several spares with me. That came in handy recently when I was on a 5 day trip shooting lots of nature scenes and I was able to use each card as an external drive/storage until I got home--using one card per day with plenty of space to spare if needed.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It depends on the size of your pictures, which depends on the pixel dimensions and the format in which they're saved. If you allow 10MB per photo, which might be the compressed size of a high-resolution image, a 32GB card could hold 3000+ photos. Storage gets eaten faster if you shoot video, especially in high resolution.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.depends, are you shooting raw? So far I've put about 600 raw images on it and haven't had to delete any.
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