Amypics
Senior Member
Actually, formatting REDUCES the number of write cycles on any memory card. Flash memory cards have a finite number of times that each memory location on the card can be written to. CF cards contain memory controllers which perform wear levelling. What that means is that every time you write data to the card, the card will save that data in a different location each time in order to make sure that all parts of the card are "worn out" equally.If you delete all files on your CF card after transferring them to
your PC, then you will not have any fragmentation issues. If you buy
quality CF cards and practice safe hardware removal then you will not
need to reformat your cards all the time. I reformat them once every
few months. I remember not reformatting one of my Lexar CF cards on
my D70 for years and not had any problems. CF cards have a limited
number of times that you can write to them and reformatting the
entire card will reduce its lifetime, although I doubt that many of
use will take that many pictures on one card and reach this point.
When you delete an image file from your card, the data doesn't get removed from the card. The computer or camera just rewrites the file allocation table (FAT) so that the file no longer appears in the file system. If you delete 200 images, then the FAT gets rewritten 200 times. As you can imagine, that causes 200 times the wear to your CF card than a single format operation which just writes a single blank FAT to the card.
In short, formatting your card is by far preferable to deleting your files one by one. This is the case even if you use your camera, PC or Mac to delete all the files in one go, because in actual fact it treats the deletion of each file as a separate operation.
Amy