64GB SD card corruption?

Yesterday I was shooting 1080/50p on my Panasonic SD-800 when I received the message "SD Card Full" and the camera stopped filming.


Later I tried to import the contents into FCP but the little "clock" symbol kept whirling around doing nothing for several minutes.


So I decided to copy the card to my desktop but after a couple of gigabytes it stopped with a problem and I went into panic mode!


The videos on the card played perfectly in the camera but it looked as though the card must be damaged as it wouldn't copy on to the computer.


This morning, to my relief, I managed to copy the individual MTS files to the desktop and they play perfectly in FCP.


Any ideas about what I can do to make my SD card behave normally? I do not re-use cards but I would like it to work normally if I need to copy stuff again.

Mac mini, macOS 15.5

Posted on Jun 28, 2025 1:19 AM

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Posted on Jun 28, 2025 5:53 AM

Your camera firmware likely corrupted your SD card file system when the file system storage reached its capacity limit.


If this is FAT, the file allocation chain is very likely corrupted. FAT is not particularly robust against corruptions.


Subsequent access to the corrupted storage will either work or won’t, based on the details of the particular operation attempted and the particular corruption.


This corruption can be addressed by an update to the camera firmware to not corrupt the file system when at the storage limit, or by avoiding the latent error in the camera firmware by avoidance; by not filling the file system.


For this particular SD card, offload the contents, reformat it, and reload it. Or offload, reformat, and re-use it elsewhere.


More than a few systems and apps do not react graciously at the storage capacity limits. macOS gets decidedly cranky here, as do various MacOS apps.


Another similar mess that can arise here are SD or other storage cards with counterfeit capacity reports. The card presents itself with 64 GB capacity, but actually has some other lower capacity. (Details and Linux tooling)

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jun 28, 2025 5:53 AM in response to Ian R. Brown

Your camera firmware likely corrupted your SD card file system when the file system storage reached its capacity limit.


If this is FAT, the file allocation chain is very likely corrupted. FAT is not particularly robust against corruptions.


Subsequent access to the corrupted storage will either work or won’t, based on the details of the particular operation attempted and the particular corruption.


This corruption can be addressed by an update to the camera firmware to not corrupt the file system when at the storage limit, or by avoiding the latent error in the camera firmware by avoidance; by not filling the file system.


For this particular SD card, offload the contents, reformat it, and reload it. Or offload, reformat, and re-use it elsewhere.


More than a few systems and apps do not react graciously at the storage capacity limits. macOS gets decidedly cranky here, as do various MacOS apps.


Another similar mess that can arise here are SD or other storage cards with counterfeit capacity reports. The card presents itself with 64 GB capacity, but actually has some other lower capacity. (Details and Linux tooling)

Jun 28, 2025 7:22 AM in response to MrHoffman

I am fairly certain there is nothing wrong with the card.


The problem was with the old reader - a USB 3.0 Kingston MobileLite G3.


A cheapo (£1 from China) reader I had lying around saved the day but it took 1h 45m to transfer the 62GB the card contained so it looks like I need a new reader.


Just out of curiosity, how long should it take to transfer 60+GB from a U3 card to the computer?


CORRECTION: This card was a U1

Jun 28, 2025 1:17 PM in response to Ian R. Brown

Ian R. Brown wrote:

I am fairly certain there is nothing wrong with the card.

The problem was with the old reader - a USB 3.0 Kingston MobileLite G3.

A cheapo (£1 from China) reader I had lying around saved the day but it took 1h 45m to transfer the 62GB the card contained so it looks like I need a new reader.

Just out of curiosity, how long should it take to transfer 60+GB from a U3 card to the computer?

CORRECTION: This card was a U1


There are several variables. The cards themselves are not all the same - in fact there are several classes according to card characteristics:


https://www.sdcard.org/developers/sd-standard-overview/speed-class/


And, of course, there are very different readers. Many may support only USB2, so even it is a case of what the limiting factor is, the card or the reader.



Jun 29, 2025 10:00 AM in response to Ian R. Brown

For serious work, I'd recommend offloading the camera cards to a local disk file using a checksummed copy method, then import to FCP from there.


If you import the files from a card using FCP, it does not do a checksummed copy. Normally, that's OK, but occasionally you may encounter a problem, and the consequences can be significant.


My team uses the product from Hedge called "Offshoot" which is designed for this. But you could also use Carbon Copy, which although designed for backups, can also be used for checksummed offloads.


All Macs have the built-in command-line tool rsync which has optional checksumming.


Probably the least expensive paid Mac GUI tool is TeraCopy, which is in the App Store. It has some mediocre reviews, but I've never tested it myself.


There are some free ones (which I also have not used): FreeFileSync, and several through Homebrew such as muCommander.


If you have Resolve (even the free version), there is a built-in file "clone" tool that's like a lightweight version of Hedge Offshoot. It is designed for offloading files. Search Youtube for Resolve clone tool backup to see tutorials.

Jun 28, 2025 4:13 AM in response to Ian R. Brown

Instead of relying on the SD cards, I'd recommend you make full copies of them. Hard drives and especially SSD are much more robust than SD cards.


Since the SD card is giving trouble, I'd make sure that everything in it is copied at least to two different locations, and then reformat the card in the camera; then do some test filming to see if the card is behaving properly. If it still gives issues, discard it (pun intended :-)).

Jun 28, 2025 4:32 AM in response to Luis Sequeira1

I always make multiple backups as well as keeping the cards and have every card I have used since 2005.


Last night I was particularly concerned as I had just filmed 25 minutes of my 2 year old grandson's antics which could never be repeated.


!!!!!!!!! In the middle of that last sentence FCP popped up covering Safari and the Import window was there displaying all the contents of the card! I thought I had closed FCP ages ago. Anyway I will see whether the card is behaving normally.

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64GB SD card corruption?

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