There’s a good article on SD-to-CF adaptors at CameraHacker, and a thread on Whirlpool about it, but no sign of a Type I SD-to-CF card adaptor to fit in my D700, disappointingly. 16mm) so in most cases, the camera door won’t shut over it - not really an option for me.
When I bought a Lexar USB3 dual slot reader there was a note that there was a firmware update available from their web site to allow use with the more recent CF cards, it was also the same with my Sandisk multi card reader. The card is in its third generation which dropped the IDE support and added USB flash storage support. Re: MacBook Pro and Compact Flash card readers. Over the years I have build about 5000 CFFA cards in 11 batches. The ones on the market at present are either Type II (which are 5mm thick, rather than the 3.3mm of Type I, and therefore not compatible with my D700, which only supports Type I), or are Type 1 cards in thickness, but generally have the SD card poking out the back of the card a bit (e.g. This page describes a project to create a CompactFlash / USB-Flash Interface card for Apple II computers (+, //e, //e enh or //gs) that started back in 2002. Configure interface to use 10Gbps network card After purchasing a server you can see the. However, it’s not quite as simple as clicking ‘buy’. The compact flash ( cf3) contains a copy of the 7705 SAR image. Lo and behold, a little Google searching turned up several immediately. It occurred to me today, though, that since SD cards are smaller than CF cards, perhaps someone has made an SD-to-CF adaptor.
As a result, I still have to dig out a USB card reader every time I want to download pics from my D700. Like other MacBook Pro owners, I find Apple’s choice of SD card slot for their sole card reader in the MacBook Pro annoying - basically all Digital SLR cameras except for the dinky low-end ones still use the larger Compact Flash cards.