I purchased CF Express cards for the coming R5, and they arrived over the past few days. Three different types. I did the Black Magic Disk Speed Test to each and thought people might appreciate the results. This test does repeated read/writes to the card to simulate real world video file use.

Delkin Devices CF Express Power (512GB)
Read: 1450 MB/sec
Write: 1120 MB/sec

Sony Tough CF Express G (512GB)
Read: 1050 MB/sec
Write: 1050 MB/sec

ProGrade (Gold Bar 256GB)
Read: 1250 MB/sec
Write: 950 MB/sec

The tests were performed about 10 times each. Card reader was a Sonnet reader with Thunderbolt 3.

The Sony card was abysmal, as it was the most expensive and claimed to be the fastest (1700/1480). The Delkin claimed 1730/1430 and wound up being the actual fastest by about 10 percent. The ProGrade with gold stripe is supposed to be 1600/1000. I have a ProGrade with black stripe (claimed 1600/1400) coming in and will add those results when it's tested.
 
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Thanks for sharing.

You're very welcome. Just a note: the implied maximum post-buffer rate of fire for the R5 would seem to be more than the 20 frames per second the camera is rated for. If we assume that a file is 55mb, you'd get 26 frames per second from the Delkin card, if it were laying those files down perfectly efficiently.

Skeptical of this, I took a couple of the cards and some very large database files on my computer and started throwing them around, making copies, transferring, etc. With this sort of informal test I came out with a roughly 300mb/sec rate. I suspect this'll be closer to actual camera performance in taking stills past the buffer. That would imply about a 6 fps rate of fire after the buffer, which isn't too too bad. So, using the fastest of these cards, your performance is likely to be somewhere between 6 fps after the buffer is full and no (card) limit whatsoever.

I don't believe we've been told how much buffer is in the camera yet. We can sort of deduce it a bit by looking at their estimates of how many frames you can take before the buffer is full, but those calculations by Canon have traditionally been very conservative, assuming average card speeds. With the R5, the most useful figures they've provided for these calculations are that at 20fps, you can get 83 full raws before the buffer is full. Of course, during those 4 seconds of firing, your camera is pulling from the cache and placing those files on the memory card. If the camera were doing this at 3 frames per second with an average card, it would imply that the buffer was actually about 70 raws big.

Extrapolating that to performance with the Delkin card, we might expect it (using conservative 300mb/s performance measured by moving files to/from card) to give us a cached performance of 100 frames rather than the 83 the camera is rated for:
FramesOffloadedTo Cache
Second 1
20​
6​
14​
Second 2
20​
6​
28​
Second 3
20​
6​
42​
Second 4
20​
6​
56​
Second 5
20​
6​
70​

If you shoot with the mechanical shutter at 12 fps, the extra time it takes to take those frames is well-used by the cache to off-load images, giving the camera a roughly 140 frames of cache - in the unlikely event all my assumptions are correct.

If you haven't rolled your eyes and stopped reading by this point, you might be interested in the calculation of just how fast a CF Express card would need to be in real world performance to effectively make the cache irrelevant. Assuming file size of 55mb, that would be throughput of 660 mb/sec for the mechanical shutter mode and 1100 mb/sec for the electronic shutter. The CF Express standard has a theoretical limit of 2000 mb/sec, and existing cards more often than not claim performance higher than the required figures. Actual performance as measured by the Black Magic tool shows some cards already exceed goal, and some don't in reality. My own file copying test shows that none of the cards are quite there. I suspect actual performance once we get an R5 to test will be somewhere between those two test ranges, making careful card choice among these options more important than has been traditionally the case.
 
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I purchased CF Express cards for the coming R5, and they arrived over the past few days. Three different types. I did the Black Magic Disk Speed Test to each and thought people might appreciate the results. This test does repeated read/writes to the card to simulate real world video file use.

Delkin Devices CF Express Power (512GB)
Read: 1450 MB/sec
Write: 1120 MB/sec

Sony Tough CF Express G (512GB)
Read: 1050 MB/sec
Write: 1050 MB/sec

ProGrade (Gold Bar 256GB)
Read: 1250 MB/sec
Write: 950 MB/sec

The tests were performed about 10 times each. Card reader was a Sonnet reader with Thunderbolt 3.

The Sony card was abysmal, as it was the most expensive and claimed to be the fastest (1700/1480). The Delkin claimed 1730/1430 and wound up being the actual fastest by about 10 percent. The ProGrade with gold stripe is supposed to be 1600/1000. I have a ProGrade with black stripe (claimed 1600/1400) coming in and will add those results when it's tested.


I got the ProGrade Onyx version in. The increased performance over the Gen 1 version of the ProGrade gold version was a bit disappointing...

ProGrade (Onyx [black/gray], 325GB)
Read: 1525 MB/sec
Write: 1020 MB/sec

That's a nice improvement on the read speed, but the all-important write speed was only 7 percent faster. The claimed speeds are 1600/1400, so the write speed is definitely suffering versus the claim.

The upshot is that the Delkin is - by far - the best performer, and the best $/GB. I'd love to try the Lexar and Sandisk versions just to be complete, but can't justify buying more cards. If someone else has those, I can show them how to conduct this test.

One interesting note. After doing so much burn-in testing of these cards, I'm noticing that they get very, very hot. Unlike CF cards or SD cards. There's just a ton of heat generated from this format it seems. This may have implications for the R5 heat limitations, and might be good news. It may mean that using an external recording could, indeed, matter in terms of the amount of time before you hit a heat limit.
 
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davidhfe

CR Pro
Sep 9, 2015
346
518
I got the ProGrade Onyx version in. The increased performance over the Gen 1 version of the ProGrade gold version was a bit disappointing...

ProGrade (Onyx [black/gray], 325GB)
Read: 1525 MB/sec
Write: 1020 MB/sec

That's a nice improvement on the read speed, but the all-important write speed was only 7 percent faster. The claimed speeds are 1600/1400, so the write speed is definitely suffering versus the claim.

The upshot is that the Delkin is - by far - the best performer, and the best $/GB. I'd love to try the Lexar and Sandisk versions just to be complete, but can't justify buying more cards. If someone else has those, I can show them how to conduct this test.

One interesting note. After doing so much burn-in testing of these cards, I'm noticing that they get very, very hot. Unlike CF cards or SD cards. There's just a ton of heat generated from this format it seems. This may have implications for the R5 heat limitations, and might be good news. It may mean that using an external recording could, indeed, matter in terms of the amount of time before you hit a heat limit.

If you read/write a lot with the card hooked in to a PC, does it still generate heat? The whole body is designed to dissipate heat, so I wouldn't be surprised if the camera is heating up the card rather than vice versa. Though that said, heat sinks on M.2. drives on PCs pretty common. I'm super skeptical than an external recorder will help with overheating, but would love to be proven wrong. If an Atomos buys you unlimited 4K-fine, that's a huge deal.
 
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OK, update:
My Delkin card stopped working, in that it was no longer recognized by the computer. B&H agreed to take it back, but interestingly, I got a call back from a fellow in customer service at Delkin (since when was that allowed in this industry?!). This real, live human left me a message indicating that there was going to be a firmware upgrade that should fix this due to an issue peculiar to the R5. He thought this should be available in 2 weeks, which of course in software land means a month.

Shoutout to Delkin for
a) calling back
b) having someone knowledgeable call back
c) giving the real story

My personal recommendation is that people not buy the Delkin cards in the next couple of weeks, but once they push out this firmware, to definitely buy the Delkins, as they tested the fastest sustained write speed among the 4 kinds I own, and if foibles pop up with the new cameras, they have a good process to deal with it.
 
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SteveC

R5
CR Pro
Sep 3, 2019
2,678
2,592
My personal recommendation is that people not buy the Delkin cards in the next couple of weeks, but once they push out this firmware, to definitely buy the Delkins, as they tested the fastest sustained write speed among the 4 kinds I own, and if foibles pop up with the new cameras, they have a good process to deal with it.

If memory serves, only the 512 GB is fast enough.
 
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I think the 512, 1tb and 2 tb are also fast enough.

Personally, I'm going to get a 2tb version in a few weeks, when we know the firmware works. The price per gb is $0.50, which is half what most others are. The fellow at Delkin told me to hold off for now, but that there would be an update in a couple weeks, which I take to mean sometime in Sept. I can hold off till then.
 
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SteveC

R5
CR Pro
Sep 3, 2019
2,678
2,592
I think the 512, 1tb and 2 tb are also fast enough.

Personally, I'm going to get a 2tb version in a few weeks, when we know the firmware works. The price per gb is $0.50, which is half what most others are. The fellow at Delkin told me to hold off for now, but that there would be an update in a couple weeks, which I take to mean sometime in Sept. I can hold off till then.

The problem is I'd really like a 128 GB card; I've no interest in paying for anything larger.
 
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HenryL

EOS R3
CR Pro
Apr 1, 2020
359
983
I got the ProGrade Onyx version in. The increased performance over the Gen 1 version of the ProGrade gold version was a bit disappointing...

ProGrade (Onyx [black/gray], 325GB)
Read: 1525 MB/sec
Write: 1020 MB/sec

That's a nice improvement on the read speed, but the all-important write speed was only 7 percent faster. The claimed speeds are 1600/1400, so the write speed is definitely suffering versus the claim.

The upshot is that the Delkin is - by far - the best performer, and the best $/GB. I'd love to try the Lexar and Sandisk versions just to be complete, but can't justify buying more cards. If someone else has those, I can show them how to conduct this test.

One interesting note. After doing so much burn-in testing of these cards, I'm noticing that they get very, very hot. Unlike CF cards or SD cards. There's just a ton of heat generated from this format it seems. This may have implications for the R5 heat limitations, and might be good news. It may mean that using an external recording could, indeed, matter in terms of the amount of time before you hit a heat limit.
Thanks for the great effort putting this comparison together. I was looking at the ProGrade Cobalt vs SanDisk 512, based on your comparison I'm leaning to the SanDisk as it takes 3 of the 4 categories over the Cobalt. I'm wondering, though, if the Gen2 Cobalt cards might have improved and maybe overtaken the SanDisk 512 in any or all of your tested categories?
 
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Thanks for the great effort putting this comparison together. I was looking at the ProGrade Cobalt vs SanDisk 512, based on your comparison I'm leaning to the SanDisk as it takes 3 of the 4 categories over the Cobalt. I'm wondering, though, if the Gen2 Cobalt cards might have improved and maybe overtaken the SanDisk 512 in any or all of your tested categories?

It's a good question, Henry. I've contacted the ProGrade folks to see if they'd lend a G2 card, but I don't have a response on that yet. I'm also asking for a loan of a few of their SD cards for an upcoming UHS-II SD card test series. I actually spoke on the phone today with someone there in regard to the card reader test we're doing this week. They and I were both stumped in regard to their reader defaulting to USB 3.1 Gen 2 speeds rather than Thunderbolt 3 speeds.

The review got a lot of attention at the companies, which is nice in that they seem to be more eager to respond and answer questions. A couple even sent cards since, unsolicited, in hopes they'd be included too. Hopefully this makes it seem worthwhile to the ProGrade folks as well. They certainly do well in the tests.
 
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An update. Since this thread petered out, these and a bunch of other CFexpress cards were compared and reviewed.

Also, there's a firmware update on the Angelbird card. And - a first - it's user-upgradeable, so long as you have Windows and an Angelbird card reader. I was able to successfully complete the upgrade this morning, and the startup delay is now completely gone (R5 firmware upgrades previously had limited the delay to once at the beginning, but that can still be annoying at times). It applies to the XT cards. More info here.
 
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Mar 25, 2011
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An update. Since this thread petered out, these and a bunch of other CFexpress cards were compared and reviewed.

Also, there's a firmware update on the Angelbird card. And - a first - it's user-upgradeable, so long as you have Windows and an Angelbird card reader. I was able to successfully complete the upgrade this morning, and the startup delay is now completely gone (R5 firmware upgrades previously had limited the delay to once at the beginning, but that can still be annoying at times). It applies to the XT cards. More info here.
Thats good news, it was strange that it delayed.
 
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Yeah, Angelbird launched the card before the R5 came out, and then Canon's implementation of the standard essentially caused the issue. This sort of thing happens when you have a new "standard" that gets interpreted by the first few products that use it. Both companies (and at least one other card manufacturer I spoke to) were cooperative with each other, though, so it seems to all be working out.
 
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