I quickly found a program that promised to scan the card and retrieve lost images. It was also the worrying though this could be something permanent that could for any reason require the super frustrating process of trying all possible stuff yourself and then getting desperate and sending the cam for repair.Īfter veryfiing pics were lost, i did a quick search for "X-t3 images not saved on SD card" if i recall well. When back home only 10% was in the card! I went crazy, although most were family pics and only 20-30 from my mountain trecking i could not believe that images were lost because of any hardware issue. Yesterday i took 250 pics, all displayed on my X-T3 screen. Just to describe my experience which had fortunately happy end. When I mount the card on Linux (something I've been doing for well over a decade) I see nothing from the last shot. I don't thik it's a gradual problem because I can put the card back in the camera and see all the saved images. I'm having the exact same thing happen to me with a Lexar card on a Fuji XE3. Most of the time it only means it couldn't find any problems - your SD card could (and is very likely to be) still be bad.
You may even notice that the size of your SD card is slowing shrinking if you fill it up on a regular basis.Įdit: Also, be wary when chkdsk or any 'file recovery program' tells you everything is OK. Likely it does write the photo to the card successfully, but after a few minutes the sectors are probably marked bad for whatever reason and are written out of the file system. Bad SD cards behave differently depending on how it goes bad, and this is just one kind of symptom. You need to get another SD card to eliminate the possibility of a bad SD card.
Here is a newer model that might work for you: Now that I have a laptop PC, I have to use a SD card reader because the built-in SD card reader slot doesn't work quite right.
SD CARD NOT SHOWING PICTURES PRO
I used a MacBook Pro 13" a few years ago, don't remember having any problems. Probably not a great idea, but maybe the iMac SD slot is a little flaky.ĭoes your iMac have a USB port? Could you try a SD card reader? For example if I remove the first SD card, and turn the camera on, it switches cards automatically and then when I put card number one back in and shoot, I can't find my stills. So, if you have a Fuji camera that uses two SD slots, the camera might be "helping" by screwing up all your expectations. It is possible to put the stills on one SD card and the video on the other SD card. I can see all the files when the card is in the camera.but when I try to import them into my iMac they don't show up (using the sd card slot). I've encountered the same seems to happen when I shoot video on the same card but not sure.