Customers most agreed on the following attributes:
Comments about Lexar Lexar 32GB, 133x High Speed Series, Professional Secure Digital High Capacity (SDHC) Memory Card:
I tested this card with a raw burst until the buffer filled (16 to 17 shots) in my new Canon 60D DSLR and compared to other cards. Here are the times from shutter press until all data was written to the card:
Lexar Professional 133x class 10 32GB (this card): 30 sec.
SanDisk Ultra II 15MB/s class 4 4GB: 21 sec.
An old PQI 150x 512MB card and a <1 year old RiData Lightning class 10 16GB were both faster, about the same as the SanDisk. A Panasonic class 4 2GB card was slower, about 40 sec.
All cards were low level formatted and tested at least four times each.
Comments about Lexar Lexar 32GB, 133x High Speed Series, Professional Secure Digital High Capacity (SDHC) Memory Card:
Bought this SD card. Previous card was not fast enough and would shut down during movie mode on my Canon 60D. The Lexar Professional worked with out error.
Comments about Lexar Lexar 32GB, 133x High Speed Series, Professional Secure Digital High Capacity (SDHC) Memory Card:
After researching SDHC cards for my D7000, I decided to try the Lexar 32 gig cards. I am using two of them- one being used as a backup.
Even though I've only had the cards for a month, I've put well over 2,000 raw images (plus a few HD video clips) on them without any hiccups or problems.
Speed-wise, I chose the Lexars because they were supposedly one of the fastest-writing SDHC cards on the market. The cards are indeed fast when shooting JPEGs or compressed raw files, but they have a tough time when shooting uncompressed, 14 bit raw files at 6 fps- this problem has only been encountered twice, though, and are very extreme instances that would probably challenge any SD card.
Value-wise, I feel the cards were a great deal, especially when one considers the capacity, reliability, and speed of them.