SanDisk Extreme CompactFlash + CFexpress Type B — Editorial Review & Camera Compatibility Guide
The SanDisk Extreme CompactFlash family (SDCFXSB-128G-G46, SDCFXSB-064G-G46, SDCFXSB-032G-G46, SDCFXPS-032G-X46) and CFexpress Type B (SDCFE-256G-GN4NN) span two generations of professional camera storage — legacy CompactFlash for older DSLRs / cinema cameras still on CF cards, and modern CFexpress Type B for current cinema + flagship mirrorless cameras (Canon R5, Nikon Z8/Z9, Sony FX3 alternative, etc.). Per Western Digital's official SanDisk memory card family page, the Extreme CompactFlash line supports UDMA 7 (160 MB/s read, 150 MB/s write); the CFexpress Type B reaches 1,700 MB/s read and 1,400 MB/s sustained write — necessary for 8K RAW video + RAW continuous burst photography.
What the Extreme CompactFlash + CFexpress Specifically Win
SanDisk Extreme CompactFlash (Legacy DSLR / Cinema)
- UDMA 7 interface — 160 MB/s read, 150 MB/s write — the fastest CompactFlash speed achievable
- Lifetime warranty + RescuePRO Deluxe data recovery
- Compatible with Canon EOS 5D Mark III/IV, Nikon D750/D810/D850 (CF + SD slot), older cinema cameras (RED Komodo via CF, ARRI Alexa, Canon C300 originals)
- 32GB / 64GB / 128GB capacity range — fits typical workflow needs without overloading
- Extreme Pro variant (SDCFXPS) at higher speed for top-tier camera bodies
- SanDisk reliability for irreplaceable photo workflows — counterfeit CF cards from no-name brands have caused production halts
SanDisk CFexpress Type B (Modern Cinema / Flagship Mirrorless)
- 1,700 MB/s read / 1,400 MB/s sustained write — necessary for Canon R5 8K RAW (~2,600 Mbps), Nikon Z8/Z9 8K N-RAW (~7,500 Mbps), Sony Alpha 1 / Alpha 7S III BIONZ XR 4K 120p
- Compatible with Canon R5 / R5 C / R3, Nikon Z8 / Z9 / Z fc (CFexpress Type B slot), Panasonic GH7, Atomos Ninja V+ (with CFexpress-to-NVMe adapter)
- 1,400 MB/s sustained write is critical for sustained 8K RAW video — without sustained speed, the camera buffer fills + recording stops
- PCIe Gen3 x2 interface internally — leverages M.2 NVMe-like architecture for sustained speed
- Lifetime warranty + advanced data recovery service
- Available 256GB capacity — plus higher capacities at premium pricing
Where Extreme CompactFlash Specifically Fits
- Canon EOS 5D Mark III/IV continuous burst (CF slot)
- Nikon D750/D810/D850 dual-slot workflow (CF + SD slots)
- Older cinema cameras still on CF (RED Komodo CF mode, ARRI Alexa LF, Canon C300 originals)
- News photographers with older bodies
- Sports / wildlife photographers using legacy CF-only bodies
- Studio commercial photography with CF-equipped flagship Canon / Nikon DSLR
- Backup workflow — older CF cards as redundancy for CF-equipped bodies
Where CFexpress Type B Specifically Fits
- Canon EOS R5 / R5 C 8K RAW recording
- Nikon Z8 / Z9 8K N-RAW recording
- Panasonic GH7 ProRes RAW recording
- Atomos Ninja V+ external recording with CFexpress adapter
- Cinema-grade RAW photo continuous burst on Z9 / Z8 / R3 (no buffer fill on 30+ fps RAW)
- Music video / commercial production requiring sustained 8K RAW
- Documentary feature production with cinema-class capture
- Pro wedding photography on flagship bodies
- News / broadcast camera workflows
Honest Limits Buyers Should Know
- Two-generation product confusion. CompactFlash and CFexpress Type B look similar but are NOT compatible. Verify camera body uses the specific format before purchase — CompactFlash card in a CFexpress slot does NOT work, and vice versa
- CompactFlash is end-of-life for new cameras. Most current pro cameras moved to CFexpress (faster) or SD/microSD (cheaper). CompactFlash is for legacy / specific older-body workflows only
- CFexpress Type B vs Type A — different physical sizes. Sony A1 / A7S III / FX3 use Type A (smaller); Canon R5 / Nikon Z8/Z9 use Type B (larger). Verify camera body's required type
- CFexpress runs HOT. Sustained high-bitrate recording (8K RAW for 20+ minutes) heats the card to 70-80°C. Some camera bodies have thermal shutdown — verify camera's thermal management before sustained-shoot workflows
- Premium pricing reflects pro tier. CFexpress Type B 256GB ~$200-300; comparable SD UHS-II 256GB ~$100. The CFexpress premium pays for sustained-write performance that SD cannot match
- Counterfeit risk on third-party marketplaces. Buy from Amazon Direct, B&H, Adorama, SanDisk direct, or authorized resellers. Counterfeit CFexpress cards fail during critical shoots
- CFexpress card readers are separate purchase. ProGrade Digital CF / CFexpress card readers exist; many consumer USB card readers don't support CFexpress speeds
- Cinema-grade 8K workflows may require multiple cards per shoot. 256GB CFexpress fills in ~25 minutes of 8K RAW; budget for 2-4 cards per major shoot
- 1,400 MB/s sustained write is theoretical maximum. Real-world sustained write under heavy heat / long sessions can drop to 800-1,000 MB/s — verify camera body + recording mode is within sustained-write capability
Where Buyers Should Look Elsewhere
- CFexpress Type A (Sony A7S III / FX3 / A1) → Sony Tough CFexpress Type A, ProGrade Digital CFexpress Type A
- UHS-II SD for mid-tier cameras → Sony Tough SF-G, ProGrade V60, Lexar Professional 2000x
- External SSD recording from HDMI/SDI output → Atomos Ninja V/V+ with internal 2.5" SATA SSD or external NVMe
- Cinema mag drives (RED, ARRI) → RED MAGAZINE / ARRI Codex magazine drives (proprietary to body)
- Backup workflow → dual-card recording in dual-slot body (CFexpress + SD or CFexpress A + B) for redundancy
- Higher capacity CFexpress (512GB / 1TB+) → Sony Tough 512GB CFexpress Type B, Delkin Black 1TB CFexpress
- Pro card reader → ProGrade Digital CF / CFexpress card reader (USB-C 10 Gbps)
Sources & Citations
- Western Digital (SanDisk), "SanDisk Extreme + CFexpress product family," westerndigital.com (accessed 2026-05-18)
- DPReview, "CFexpress Type B vs UHS-II SD comparison," dpreview.com (accessed 2026-05-18)
- CFA (CompactFlash Association), "CompactFlash + CFexpress specification documentation," compactflash.org (accessed 2026-05-18)
- Newsshooter, "Cinema camera CFexpress workflow coverage," newsshooter.com (accessed 2026-05-18)
Last verified: 2026-05-18





