![]() ![]() If a new card is yielding the same results, there is likely a phone call to the trail camera manufacturer in your future. In the field the only remedy you have is to try a new card. There is simply no fix for that particular SD card. It could also be that the card you are trying to use has previously been formatted to a different camera, and the files that previous camera created is unsupported by the new camera. Sometime you just get a bad SD card, it is part of the process. Like all manufacturers there is no way that every single product they create is flawless. It is possible that the SD card is corrupted. Knowing that it is not full, in fact there is nothing on the card, I shut the camera off and try again, and again. ![]() I switch out my SD cards, and the trail camera reads that the new card is full. This has happened to me more times than I care to admit. Common Problems SD Card Problems SD Card Is Reading Full Because no peaceful walk in nature should be ruined by technology. ![]() We have compiled a list of the most common reasons why a trail camera is failing to read an SD card, and how to fix it in the field. Other possible issues include a corrupted card, a locked SD card and a card that is not properly formatted. SD Card problems in trail cameras most often the result of a bad connection between the card and the housing socket. They seem contradictory in the natural scope of things, and can leave you miles from your vehicle without any idea of how to correct the problem. There is not one thing that sets me off more than ruining a quiet day in nature with technological problems. Those peaceful days can quickly come to a screeching halt at the hands of an SD card failure. There is nothing better than peaceful walks in the field, quiet days surrounded by nature, and the art of collecting photos and videos of how nature reacts when no one is around to see it.
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