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Spec drill · Dual card slots

α6700 vs α7C II

A side-by-side readout for dual card slots.

Sony · α6700
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Sony · α7C II
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Context

Understanding dual card slots

Two slots means two cards. Modern bodies support multiple write modes:

Write modes

  • Backup. Every frame is written identically to both cards. The standard for paid work — if one card fails or corrupts, the second is intact.
  • Overflow. Card 2 starts writing when card 1 fills. Doubles capacity for long events.
  • Split. RAW to card 1, JPEG to card 2; or stills to one, video to the other.

Slot symmetry

Watch for asymmetric slots: one CFexpress + one SD is common. The slower SD slot bottlenecks backup mode to SD speeds — high-bitrate 4K/8K video may not be writable in backup at all.

Why it matters

For weddings, sports, and editorial work, dual slots are non-negotiable. The cost of a single failed card on a once-in-a-lifetime shoot dwarfs the body price premium. Hobbyist bodies (Canon R8, Nikon Zf in single-slot configs) prioritize size; pro bodies (R5 II, Z8) always ship dual.

This matchupBoth α6700 and α7C II lack dual card slots, so this spec is not a deciding factor between them.

Glossary

What is dual card slots?

A camera body with two memory card slots. Enables in-camera backup writing, overflow recording, or splitting RAW and JPEG between cards. A defining feature of professional bodies.

Read the full Dual card slots explainer →
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Other specs on this comparison

See the full Cameras category for all products ranked by Mars Score.