Transferring photos from your camera isn't every photographer's favourite job, so in this group test aim to find the best memory card reader based on speed and usability. Connecting your camera directly to your computer to transfer images is fine when you've only got a few photos on your memory card. However, when you've been on holiday and filled up a few cards, a card reader really is the best - and quickest - way to get all of your photos onto your computer. With the large file sizes that many digital cameras are capable of generating these days, the faster your card reader, the sooner you'll have all your shots on the memory card downloaded, and the sooner you can start editing your photographs. Here, we assess the speed and usability of six of the best memory card readers, ranging in price from £15 to well over £30. SEE MORE: Best memory card reader: 01 Lexar Professional USB 3.0 Dual-Slot Reader £35, $50 www.lexar.com The pop-up design of this reader helps keep its card slots protected when not in use.
Performance is a mixed bag, though: loaded with a fast UHS-1 SDHC card, we achieved respectable read and write speeds of 79MB and 74MB per second respectively, when transferring large video files. UDMA 7 Compact Flash video read and write speeds were also healthy at 115MB and 60MB per second. However, reading images from our CF card consistently resulted in a painful sub-3MB-per-second speed when other readers were unfazed. This is also the least versatile device here, and falls short on value. Verdict Pros: Fast with SD. Clever pop-up design Cons: Flummoxed when reading images from CF We say: Looks the part, but performance is underwhelming Score: 3/5 [interaction id='551c28c97fdf079b4e1d440d'] SEE MORE: Best memory card reader: 02 Transcend USB 3.0 Card Reader RDF8.
Sd Card Reader For Mac
£15, $16 www.transcend-info.com If you'd rather splash your cash on your camera than a card reader, then try this one. It won't break the bank, yet it'll handle Micro SD and Memory Stick cards, in addition to the usual SD and CF. The cheapest reader on test, it's also one of the smallest, and it's no slouch. SD scores proved consistently high, whether transferring multiple image files or large single videos. CF speeds were mostly a match for pricier rival readers, although the Transcend's 118MB-per-second video read rate was more average and couldn't quite cut it with the 130MB-per-second or higher performance of the front-runners. Verdict Pros: Versatility and speed for a bargain price Cons: Just edged out by the fastest readers We say: Not quite the fastest reader, but the best value Score: 5/5 SEE MORE: Best memory card reader: 03 Kingston USB 3.0 Media Reader £22, $30 www.kingston.com Kingston's offering is the only reader that gave Lexar's uber-expensive Professional Workflow a run for its money in the speed stakes, maxing out just 4MB per second slower at an impressive 130MB per second when reading video files from a CF card. It also blitzed our remaining CF benchmarks and continued to set sensational SD speeds, topping the video file rankings with 88MB-per- second read and 76MB-per-second write rates.