 Hi guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rosal here. So I was looking, I was on the Canon forums in the summer, trying to figure out what was the biggest storage that the Canon Vixia HFR 800 was able to take. So the SD, sorry, the Vixia HFR 800 takes an SD card and it's a full size SD, but it doesn't mean you have to use full SD. You can simply use and, you know, one of these adapters which you can pick up for a dollar or actually most micro SDs nowadays, they just throw them in for free. So the official thing listed on the instruction manual I believe is 256, which is already pretty big, but I'm going to show you guys what I got working. This is the biggest micro SD card I could find last summer on Amazon that would chip. It's 512 gigabytes, I know it's a tiny bit out of focus, which is, you know, slightly over half a terabyte. So that's huge. I'm just going to pop this guy in just to show you guys that it can work and how much my SD card is pretty much empty at this point in time. I don't really have anything. I've just offloaded footage. So just want to show you guys firstly that it works and how to format it and a couple of other things to know about the SD card. So if you go into other settings and then you scroll down to initialize SD, this is where you're going to get your info on the SD card in the camcorder. So just to show you guys that it is possible. In fact, I get a little bit more, it comes up as 537 gigs and showing that I've used 500, sorry, 727 megabytes. But yeah, once you've got your, you know, five more than 500 gigabytes, you've got a ton of storage. Now you can of course also find 512 gigabyte full sized SD cards. And I think there's terabyte SDs now as well. I'm not sure they can work, but I can vouch for the fact that even though the manual says 256, you can get, you can get this memory card at the site in the camcorder. Now, how much can you record using a memory card of this size? So you can access your video card at your recording quality by going to this screen and going into video quality. And something that's really useful is that for each recording quality, it's going to tell you how much recording time you can have and the higher your recording quality as measured in megabytes per second, Mbps, the bigger the files and the less, less you're going to record obviously, right? So you can see I record at 17 megabytes per second, it's full, full HD. Now this camera only does full HD, it's not a 4k capable camcorder. And this gives me 70 hours. So that's a real, really generous amount of time. If I go down to four megabytes per second for long play, I actually get 291 hours. And then as I said, this memory card is virtually empty. I think there's like something like one clip on it. If you want to get more detail, you actually can, you can click on that info and you can toggle between 24 and 30p as your frame rate. So I actually shoot usually that should have been set for 24 frames per second and bit rate of 17 megabytes per second. And that gives me 70 hours. Now just to show you how much at 60p recording, the highest quality available on this camcorder, that reduces it to 33 hours and 44 minutes at 24 mbps. You are, it gives you 49 hours, 51 minutes, so almost 50 hours. I'm going to leave it here. And I have 70 hours of footage that I can record onto this SD card. So purpose of this video, just to tell you that I managed to get a 512 gigabyte micro SD card working with this camcorder, which means I guess that it theoretically can be done. If you've managed to get something even bigger like a terabyte, let me know. But I'm certainly very happy with this. It gives me tons and tons of storage to record onto. Thanks for watching. If you want to get more videos from me, please subscribe to this YouTube channel.