SDcards. - HTC 10 Accessories

Hey guys. So whats the best SD for the 10? Looks like the SanDisk Extreme PRO SD UHS-II is the fastest card available at the moment. Anyone using it and is there a noticable difference in phone storage speed vs the sdcard speed?

This is the one I was looking at. http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/produ...qxpj_128g_ancm3_128gb_extreme_pro_uhs_ii.html
OR maybe the 64gb version
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/produ...sqxpj_064g_ancm3_64gb_extreme_pro_uhs_ii.html

I'm using the SanDisk Extreme Pro 32gb. Honestly, I can't tell much difference between it and my Samsung EVO+ Card

I'm using the 200gb Sandisk Extreme Pro. It's not the fastest, but I actually just cared more about capacity. Have it setup as my adoptable storage at the moment.

FYI, Amazon is selling Sony 128GB Class 10 UHS-1 MicroSD cards for ~$33. Link. 64GB is ~$23.

The fastest one you can get, that the 10 can actually take advantage of is the Sandisk Extreme Pro 64gb UHS1 - U3.
http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extre...894646&sr=8-2&keywords=sandisk+extreme+pro+u3
The snapdragon 820 does not support UHS2 cards, so that would just be wasted money.

I'm using this one and the overall reviews are mixed but I get write speeds of 77 Mbps and reads at 89 Mbps but its relatively cheap for a 64 gig U3 card
http://www.amazon.com/PNY-Elite-Mic...346&sr=8-2&keywords=pny+elite#customerReviews

Larger capacity cards will be slower. 64GB may be best bang for buck if you are looking for performance. I preferred capacity as well as speed, and hence got:
http://www.amazon.com/Lexar-Professional-microSDXC-UHS-II-LSDMI128CBNL1000R/dp/B00U77V5KU
I have been happy with its performance.

regalpimpin said:
The fastest one you can get, that the 10 can actually take advantage of is the Sandisk Extreme Pro 64gb UHS1 - U3.
http://www.amazon.com/SanDisk-Extre...894646&sr=8-2&keywords=sandisk+extreme+pro+u3
The snapdragon 820 does not support UHS2 cards, so that would just be wasted money.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh that's great info! I didn't know that the 10 didn't support the UHS2 cards.
Sent from my HTC 10 using XDA-Developers mobile app

There will be a 265GB micro sd card from Samsung - Samsung EVO Plus 256GB .

I don't buy anything from Samsung as I have had horrible luck with their products. Had a 64GB a year ago that went bad. Personal experience/preference...
I am using the Sandisk 200GB, if you watch Amazon they run sales on them. I got mine in mid-march for $59.99.

128gb sandisk extreme on sale now at amazon... https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01DYN4VPE/ref=cm_sw_r_other_apa_itlnxb0VTPKS3
Sent from my HTC 10 using XDA-Developers mobile app

I went with this one 95mb read, 90mb writing 128gb http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-Micro...&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s00

Fastest MicroSD :-
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B010NE3N3S/ref=psdc_3015433011_t2_B00NUB3530
Source:-
https://havecamerawilltravel.com/photographer/fastest-microsd-cards

I got this one https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01DYN4VPE/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s01?ie=UTF8&psc=1 which is $66 right now. I read that what is considered fastest is sustained fast write where if you are using the card as Adoptable Storage you may want fast 4Kb random writes which is not the same.
So, even where Extreme Pro exist I went for the Extreme in hopes the HTC 10 doesn't complain when adopting...and it didn't
Now I just have to keep searching for a plastic belt holster for a naked HTC 10..

4KB random reads are the most important for adoptable storage as you will be loading application data from the SD card.
4KB random write is also important but not as much as the read speed is.
To be fair though, random write speed is always much lower than random read speed, so focusing on as high random write speed as possible isn't a bad idea since if the random write speed is high, the random read speed will be high as well.
For reference the HTC 10 does about 10MB/s in both read and write for 4KB random.
As an example the 64GB size of Sandisk Extreme U3 has been benchmarked to be capable of 5.5MB/s and 0.5MB/s in 4KB random read and write respectively.
That card would be okay for adoptable storage, the read speed is halved compared to the internal storage but application writing data or updating them is excruciatingly slow.
Knowing the baseline 4KB random read/write speed of our internal storage and the usual SD cards, I would personally aim for at least 5MB/s read and 1.5MB/s read.
Higher end 32-64GB cards are usually capable of 7-10MB/s 4KB random read and 2-3MB/s 4KB random write. While Samsung's Pro+ 64GB card is crem de la crem at 10MB/s and 5MB/s respectively, about as good as it gets with current NAND technology.
Unfortunately SD card manufacturers don't advertise 4KB random speeds so we have to find the information ourselves and hope some kind soul has purchased the card we're looking at and benchmarked it with a decent card reader. Your best bet is to google the card make/model + crystaldiskmark or scour Amazon, Newegg and so on reviews for benchmark numbers..
If you find a review that states 4KB random speeds in IOPS (Input Output operations Per Second), the conversion to MBps = (IOPS * KB per IO) / 1024.
So if you have
4KB random read 1200IOPS = (1200*4)/1024 = 4.68MB/s
4KB random write 400 IOPS = (400*4)/1024 = 1.56MB/s
And the other way around IOPS = (MBps / KB per IO) * 1024

Related

[Q] microSDHC speeds - Advice

Hi,
I've been following the discussion on faster IO here by mounting extra stuff back on the SD card. I believe that to take advantage of this a faster microSDHC card can only help.
My card is a SanDisc 16GB Class 2 job, I just transferred it from my old N97 mini.
Looking around I noticed that generally the fastest is a class 6 although Kingston now seem to produce a class 10.
Of course Class increase == $$ increase.
I noticed that one site mentioned low speeds with a class 6 when using a benchmark tool, SD Card Speed Tester from the market.
Of course I just had to download it and see what my lowly class 2 card would do.
B***dy H*ll it exceeded class 6 cards and achieved:
Write Speed is 9MB/s
Read Speed is 15MB/s
Screen shot attached.
So my question is, how likely is it that it really is a fast card or just that the BM tool got it wrong ?
the "class" mentioned is actually the minimum r/w speed rated for the card, and branded cards often have speeds exceeding the rated class easily, so yeah, it is a fast card, no doubt
Thanks,
This was a "bounce my thoughts" type of question. You've confirmed my thoughts.
Just as a sanity check I later tried my other class 2 card, a 4GB job that came with the phone. It was 3-4MB/s write. That improved my confidence that the SD speed app was producing reasonable results.

better 32GB MicroSDHC than Sandisk

Anyone know of a better 32GB MicroSD card than the Sandisk? It's only class 2, but its random write performance is leaps and bounds better than both the Kingston and the Patriot LX, which helps to prevent severe lag when using apps2sdext.
I had hope a class 10 Patriot would at least be as good, but the results couldn't have been more different. Ideally I would like more sequential write speed without having to sacrifice random write performance.
We have been using/ Distributing microSD Class 10 cards from Wintec. I am using there 16 GB Class 10 on a Samsung Captivate. If you could direct me to a Android test program you like, I would be glad to run it. I have had no problems since switching.
but sandisk is the best around! for the price.....
nokia or kingstone but i prefer sandisk for the price
i have a sandisk and the card is great
I have never found anything better or more reliable than Sandisk. No bells and whistles just solid performance.
i need this type of card
but with model to choose
The OCZ branded cards are good in my experience.
Lexar's apparently got some top-notch class-10 32giggers out...
You can order them straight from their website (they might be a little backlogged though).
Class 2 and 4 cards have better random access speed and random read/write than class 6 or 10 cards in general. To get higher sequential write speeds, manufacturers sacrifice the random access speeds. That's just how it is.
The best all around card I've ever found is Sandisk class 4.
My 32gb Sandisk class 4 outperforms any other class 10 or 2 32gb card I've tested in the random access and random read/write speeds. That's what's most important when using with WP7 or Android when using it for apps or OS files that need to be accessed quickly. Class 6 and 10 cards are setup to initialize the area of the card that is about to be used to make the sequential write/read quicker, but it takes extra time in the beginning to do the initialization. If your using the card where you need to access small bits of info from various parts of card quickly, you will do best with class 2 or 4.
Most people seem to assume that the higher the class, the better the card is for everything, but that's not how it is. Different purposes need different kinds of speed... cards with higher sequential speeds have lower random speeds.
zarathustrax...it seems to be a hot topic. after all, repetition is the best way to learn
Will Scripts Improve random access speeds?
zarathustrax said:
Class 2 and 4 cards have better random access speed and random read/write than class 6 or 10 cards in general. To get higher sequential write speeds, manufacturers sacrifice the random access speeds. That's just how it is.
The best all around card I've ever found is Sandisk class 4.
My 32gb Sandisk class 4 outperforms any other class 10 or 2 32gb card I've tested in the random access and random read/write speeds. That's what's most important when using with WP7 or Android when using it for apps or OS files that need to be accessed quickly. Class 6 and 10 cards are setup to initialize the area of the card that is about to be used to make the sequential write/read quicker, but it takes extra time in the beginning to do the initialization. If your using the card where you need to access small bits of info from various parts of card quickly, you will do best with class 2 or 4.
Most people seem to assume that the higher the class, the better the card is for everything, but that's not how it is. Different purposes need different kinds of speed... cards with higher sequential speeds have lower random speeds.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Noob question: recently, scripts have been produced to, for example, speed the reading of photos in the gallery. Will those same scripts improve the class 10 cards such that their performance is better than class 4 cards?
Ashyford said:
Noob question: recently, scripts have been produced to, for example, speed the reading of photos in the gallery. Will those same scripts improve the class 10 cards such that their performance is better than class 4 cards?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They may improve speeds a little in your phone, but it doesn't change how the sd cards controller acts. So no, it won't make class 10 have better random speeds and access times than a high quality class 2 or 4. The controller in the SD card and the actual NAND memory chip itself decides how the card reads and writes and the speeds it has.
andisk is the best
i want to know too . . . .

[Q] Question on MicroSD speeds

Can anyone comment yet on the speeds they are getting with their internal microsd cards for read and write?
I would like to see if it is worth splashing out on an expensive high speed card, or because it is running USB2 that in real terms it is crippled to about 20MBps read/write. It would be a pitty if the speeds are crappy, as samsung is making some pretty sweet microsd cards these days.
Regards
hardjards said:
Can anyone comment yet on the speeds they are getting with their internal microsd cards for read and write?
I would like to see if it is worth splashing out on an expensive high speed card, or because it is running USB2 that in real terms it is crippled to about 20MBps read/write. It would be a pitty if the speeds are crappy, as samsung is making some pretty sweet microsd cards these days.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Afaik, sd card doesn't use the usb bus.
I have a cheap 64GB microsd and it gives 40/18mbps on the 8.4 pro on a1 sd bench tests
ssuper2k said:
Afaik, sd card doesn't use the usb bus.
I have a cheap 64GB microsd and it gives 40/18mbps on the 8.4 pro on a1 sd bench tests
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you very much Ssuper2k. That is good to know if you are getting decent speeds on a cheap 64GB microsd. Anyone got any high rated SD cards share any light on what it tops out at ?
Thanks again.
hardjards said:
Thank you very much Ssuper2k. That is good to know if you are getting decent speeds on a cheap 64GB microsd. Anyone got any high rated SD cards share any light on what it tops out at ?
Thanks again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Heres mine... Sandisk 64GB Class 10
BossJ said:
Heres mine... Sandisk 64GB Class 10
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is not the SD card...
My g.skill 64GB class 10 benchmarks around 44MB/sec read, 14 write. It cost $25.
Skitals said:
That is not the SD card...
My g.skill 64GB class 10 benchmarks around 44MB/sec read, 14 write. It cost $25.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ooops. you are right... a1 sd bench labels it wrong. It says Internal SD card as my external and my internal as my external. (Sorry)
Here's my new results - reading 40 MB/sec 14 MB/s write..
Once again - sorry about that.
Guys, when you say Class 10 you aren't really speaking to the speed of the card. There is a wide range of speeds in cards that are all rated as class 10. Samsung has some that are 90 read and 80 write for example and most only advertise as 30 read and don't even say their write. Anyone have one of Samsung's good 90/50 or 90/80 cards they have tested?
I have just benchmarked a 64GB Samsung Pro MicroSDXC card (rated at 90MB/s read, 80MB/s write). In a USB 3.0 card reader on my computer it writes at around 65MB/s average and reads at upwards of 80MB/s.
In the Tab S 8.4 (Wi-Fi only model) it benchmarks at 49.53MB/s read and 24.53MB/s write in A1 SD Bench
So what would anyone say... Is the best card for this particular device? Any recommendations?
If you're not planning on taking the MicroSD card out of the tablet in order to transfer content onto it, then you might as well just go for a mid-range card as it will be limited by USB 2.0 transfer speeds anyway. I'd say the Samsung Evo or the old Samsung Pro card would be fine depending on pricing.
I dont plan on taking it out. Since the above Benchmade had the pro at 49.53MB/s read. I feel It's just going to be overkill. Since its not getting the full 90 MB/s read 80MB/s write. I'm thinking the Evo should suffice. What are your thoughts?
I meant the old Pro model, which I think was 70MB/s Read - 20MB/s write, these can sometimes be had for similar money as the new Evo. I think you'd be fine with either of those, or even the Plus model. I think the Samsung MicroSDs are fairly reliable in general.
So nobody knows if Tab S has standard bus, high speed bus or Ultra High Speed Bus UHS-I or UHS-II?
I think that micro SD card Class 10 U3 guarantees minimum 30MB/s. So it supports even 4K recording...
But I still don't know if it is worth of a lot of money. If benchmarks are true - Tab S has UHS (your 45MB/s). If!
bus speeds
belek1979 said:
So nobody knows if Tab S has standard bus, high speed bus or Ultra High Speed Bus UHS-I or UHS-II?
I think that micro SD card Class 10 U3 guarantees minimum 30MB/s. So it supports even 4K recording...
But I still don't know if it is worth of a lot of money. If benchmarks are true - Tab S has UHS (your 45MB/s). If!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
According to Samsung support, the Tab S micro SD speeds is limited by the USB 2.0 bus, or 60 MB/s. So that would imply UHS, though the 90MB/s cards would not get the full speed. I would like to see someone test a 90MB/s card and see what the results are. Probably just going to go with a 48MB/s card if there isn't any difference. Though I think write speeds are significantly different between the higher speed UHS-I cards and the lower speed ones (50 vs 10 MB/s write I think).
If anyone has a couple cards and a Tab S they can test with, I would love to see the results.

So I bought a UHS-3 SD Card for my G3. Overkill?

Hi
I bought a SanDisk Extreme UHS-3 SD Card out of impulse today.
I'm unsure if the G3 has enough bandwidth to deal with it.
Has anyone bought a UHS-3 SD Card and is using on his G3?
Tapatalked thru my LG G3
Bump
Nobody tried? Couldn't find any info either
Tapatalked thru my LG G3
I am using a 64gb Sandisk extreme UHS-I U3 (UHS Level 3) card. Seems to work fine. I don't understand what issue you were logically expecting to experience.
gandalf_grey91 said:
I am using a 64gb Sandisk extreme UHS-I U3 (UHS Level 3) card. Seems to work fine. I don't understand what issue you were logically expecting to experience.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Improved speeds etc. I thought about using MultiROM on it.. Could you please run A1 SD bench and post the results?
I'm getting pretty much the same card as you
GTMoraes said:
Improved speeds etc. I thought about using MultiROM on it.. Could you please run A1 SD bench and post the results?
I'm getting pretty much the same card as you
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Read 67.05MB/s Write 31.64MB/s
gandalf_grey91 said:
Read 67.05MB/s Write 31.64MB/s
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Write speed looks very good, but read is disappointing...
thanks! But it seems that the G3 is limited to UHS-I =/
I am getting 38.44 and 20.03 only for samsung evo uhs 1 I guess your result is pretty good
Zenroid said:
I am getting 38.44 and 20.03 only for samsung evo uhs 1 I guess your result is pretty good
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm using a Samsung Class 10 SD Card. Terrible 44.34MB/s read and 17.38MB/s write, default benchmark
Using the Precise Benchmark, I'm getting 59.7MB/s read and 19.22MB/s write. It's too bad.
In comparison, I'm getting 183.92MB/s read and 38.7MB/s write on the internal memory (precise benchmark, with reboot)
I expected somewhere near the internal memory read speeds with the Sandisk extreme, but at least there's the decent write speed.
I wanted to run some ROMs on the memory card, but with those read speeds, it doesn't seem feasible.
Or perhaps the G3 internal memory is just absurdly fast. I'll try with some other devices around my home
---
Funny. The Galaxy S4 Mini here has slower internal memory than my Class 10 SD Card. But still, if I install Android on my SD Card, it'll be as slow as taking 10~20 seconds to open a simple app.
I don't get it
gandalf_grey91 said:
Read 67.05MB/s Write 31.64MB/s
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just received my UHS-3 card.
Pretty disappointed by the read speeds.
I was getting ~65MB/s read and ~14MB/s write.
The SanDisk Extreme is giving me ~48MB/s read and ~30MB/s write.
Massive improvement in write, but messed up in read.... I don't know what's wrong
GTMoraes said:
Just received my UHS-3 card.
Pretty disappointed by the read speeds.
I was getting ~65MB/s read and ~14MB/s write.
The SanDisk Extreme is giving me ~48MB/s read and ~30MB/s write.
Massive improvement in write, but messed up in read.... I don't know what's wrong
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Being the inventor of trans flash memory, Sandisk seems to feel the need to provide a distinct USP, over and above the competition, for it trans flash memory products. Unfortunately this usually means they are surfing very close to edge of their fabrication technology. I base this on my observation of the ever-changing product code attached to Sandisk 128GB micro sd cards, which has changed 3 times in the last 10-12 weeks.
Put simply, like CPUs, I believe Sandisk are speed testing and grading their trans flash products, the extreme range is exactly the same as the ultra range, only labeled and marketed differently. Because there is no distinct technological advantage, there is likely to be a more pronounced range in both read and write speeds. So, while a tested write speed of, for example, 30MB/s may mean an individual micro sd card can be labeled as "extreme" by Sandisk, doesn't mean its read speed will be consistent with every other micro sd card labeled as "extreme".
Oh, and remember, only 4KB random write speed is the true write speed test for memory cards. This is the specification that makes the real difference if you need to boot an OS from the card.
gandalf_grey91 said:
Being the inventor of trans flash memory, Sandisk seems to feel the need to provide a distinct USP, over and above the competition, for it trans flash memory products. Unfortunately this usually means they are surfing very close to edge of their fabrication technology. I base this on my observation of the ever-changing product code attached to Sandisk 128GB micro sd cards, which has changed 3 times in the last 10-12 weeks.
Put simply, like CPUs, I believe Sandisk are speed testing and grading their trans flash products, the extreme range is exactly the same as the ultra range, only labeled and marketed differently. Because there is no distinct technological advantage, there is likely to be a more pronounced range in both read and write speeds. So, while a tested write speed of, for example, 30MB/s may mean an individual micro sd card can be labeled as "extreme" by Sandisk, doesn't mean its read speed will be consistent with every other micro sd card labeled as "extreme".
Oh, and remember, only 4KB random write speed is the true write speed test for memory cards. This is the specification that makes the real difference if you need to boot an OS from the card.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That was very informative. Yes, it seems that Sandisk is pushing any 30MB/s write card as Extreme, and if it complies with a minimum read (very minimum it seems), it's off to go.
I'm unsure whether should I return this card (need to pay shipping costs) or keep it as it is
Many thanks for this answer! I'll check for random 4kb write to see which one fares better
Tapatalked thru my CM12 G3!
GTMoraes said:
I'm unsure whether should I return this card (need to pay shipping costs) or keep it as it is
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Two quotes from the Sandisk legal statement about Extreme 64GB micro sd card:
2) Card only. Up to 80 MB/s read; up to 50 MB/s write. Based on internal testing; performance may be lower depending upon host device.
(4) UHS Speed Class 3 designates a performance option designed to support real time video recording in U3-enabled host devices.
---------- Post added at 11:41 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:26 PM ----------
GTMoraes said:
I'm unsure whether should I return this card (need to pay shipping costs) or keep it as it is
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry, previous numbers were for 64GB Extreme Plus micro sd cards (Costs twice as much). For 64GB Extreme micro sd card it should have read:
(2) Up to 60 MB/s read speed; up to 40 MB/s write speed. Based on internal testing; performance may be lower depending on host device, interface, usage conditions and other factors.
See what I said about grading the speed of the cards. Just so they can squeeze a little more money from their customers. BTW I see that Kingston and Lexar are doing 128GB micro sd cards now.
gandalf_grey91 said:
Two quotes from the Sandisk legal statement about Extreme 64GB micro sd card:
2) Card only. Up to 80 MB/s read; up to 50 MB/s write. Based on internal testing; performance may be lower depending upon host device.
(4) UHS Speed Class 3 designates a performance option designed to support real time video recording in U3-enabled host devices.
---------- Post added at 11:41 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:26 PM ----------
Sorry, previous numbers were for 64GB Extreme Plus micro sd cards (Costs twice as much). For 64GB Extreme micro sd card it should have read:
(2) Up to 60 MB/s read speed; up to 40 MB/s write speed. Based on internal testing; performance may be lower depending on host device, interface, usage conditions and other factors.
See what I said about grading the speed of the cards. Just so they can squeeze a little more money from their customers. BTW I see that Kingston and Lexar are doing 128GB micro sd cards now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I emailed my seller and he posted pretty much the same thing, and said my card was well within the normal operating speeds, and a replacement wouldn't make it any better.
I'm getting 51MB/s read and 33MB/s write nowadays. Guess something was running on the background back then.
Guess I'll have to live with it. It ain't too bad, and random 4k is better than the Samsung one
Tapatalked thru my CM12 G3!
The Extreme cards will get 40-50 but the Extreme Plus get around 80. The newer Pro gets 95. Its obvious Sandisk is inching forward trying to create a new product with a +$100 price point. I got lucky during the holidays and scored my 64gb Extreme Plus during the holidays for $30
xlxcrossing said:
The Extreme cards will get 40-50 but the Extreme Plus get around 80. The newer Pro gets 95. Its obvious Sandisk is inching forward trying to create a new product with a +$100 price point. I got lucky during the holidays and scored my 64gb Extreme Plus during the holidays for $30
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Now that was a deal. I got my Extreme 64GB for what would be 90 US Dollars. That's the price around here unfortunately.
I've contacted again my seller and he seems to be okay with swapping my card. I ran the SD test three times for each of my 64GB cards to see how they would fare.
As expected, the Samsung has a higher read speed, but minimum write (Class 10, Minimum 10MB/s write speed, as I've read).
The SanDisk Extreme has a slightly lower write speed than what I thought would be 30MB/s, but nothing too bad. But read speeds are not that good, compared to a lower-end rival card.
http://imgur.com/a/KNGpT

Micro SD Card compatability?

I know, this is probably a silly question, but am I the only one that notices how devices only tend to label compatibility with Micro SD cards based on size, and not speed or class? For instance, my Galaxy Tab S2, it simply says it can take up to a 128gb SD card, but it does not say what speed it will work with.
The reason I ask, is that I am now in the market for a 128gb card, and yet I don't want to buy an expensive fast one, if my tablet will not be able to take advantage of the premium speed. Anyone have any thoughts?
I don't know about the speed but I have a SanDisk 200 GB that runs fine.
I think that any phone or tablet that will read 128 GB will also work with 200 GB.
Shofar
Don't worry
Any MicroSD card will work in your Galaxy Tab S2. But then, you might have to format it. When you buy the card, keep an eye out on the speed class- higher speeds are much better!
You are looking for a 128GB card, and I use one in my tablet so don't worry. It will work! But I seriously recommend a higher performance card because it can get very slow with cheaper cards.
Hope this helps!
I just tested a regular class 10 card and a UHS-1 card. Both tested at 9mb write and 40mb read. The same UHS-1 card tested over 40mb write using an Odroid C1 board.
lewmur said:
I just tested a regular class 10 card and a UHS-1 card. Both tested at 9mb write and 40mb read. The same UHS-1 card tested over 40mb write using an Odroid C1 board.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I suppose that means that using anything above class 10 is irrelevant?
wirelesskebab said:
I suppose that means that using anything above class 10 is irrelevant?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, that means that "class" classification is outdated. Fast cards (read and write) bear the UHS-I "U3" classification, "U1" is slower.
In future, only buy U3 cards, like the SanDisk Extreme family.
saintsimon said:
No, that means that "class" classification is outdated. Fast cards (read and write) bear the UHS-I "U3" classification, "U1" is slower.
In future, only buy U3 cards, like the SanDisk Extreme family.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I guess you missed the part where I stated that the UHS card had a write speed of 40mb using the Odroid C1 board. Obviously, when it only writes 9mb in the S2, then the S2 itself doesn't support the higher speeds. So, no matter ability the card has, if the device's bus doesn't support the higher speed, then the card's ability is meaningless. Any card you use is going to be limited by the bus speed of the device.
Paying extra for a better card is pointless if the device doesn't support the higher speed.
lewmur said:
I guess you missed the part where I stated that the UHS card had a write speed of 40mb using the Odroid C1 board. Obviously, when it only writes 9mb in the S2, then the S2 itself doesn't support the higher speeds. So, no matter ability the card has, if the device's bus doesn't support the higher speed, then the card's ability is meaningless. Any card you use is going to be limited by the bus speed of the device.
Paying extra for a better card is pointless if the device doesn't support the higher speed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This was what I meant, I'll make sure to buy a decent one but not the "best". Quick question, how are the internal memory write speeds? Actually, what card should I get then? How fast is the internal memory write speeds? Thanks!
Just tested the 32 GB SanDisk Extreme (U3 but not an Extreme Plus or Pro) in my T815 with the "A1 SD Bench" app:
read 59,70 MB/s or 61,04 MB/s, write 22,75 MB/s or 24,70 MB/s. The second numbers are the result of using the "accurate mode" of the test app.
saintsimon said:
Just tested the 32 GB SanDisk Extreme (U3 but not an Extreme Plus or Pro) in my T815 with the "A1 SD Bench" app:
read 59,70 MB/s or 61,04 MB/s, write 22,75 MB/s or 24,70 MB/s. The second numbers are the result of using the "accurate mode" of the test app.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wat?! Is it possible that the LTE version (T815) vs T810 has a different card reader? If not happy days!
wirelesskebab said:
This was what I meant, I'll make sure to buy a decent one but not the "best". Quick question, how are the internal memory write speeds? Actually, what card should I get then? How fast is the internal memory write speeds? Thanks!
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Why don't you install the A1 SD Benchmark from the Play Store and test your own cards? My internal storage rates 50mb write and 160 read.
Hi,
I'm considering this microSD for my new tablet s2, do you think is good quality?
http://www.amazon.it/Memoria-SanDisk-Android-MicroSDXC-Adattatore/dp/B010Q57S62/
nephtys59 said:
Hi,
I'm considering this microSD for my new tablet s2, do you think is good quality?
http://www.amazon.it/Memoria-SanDisk-Android-MicroSDXC-Adattatore/dp/B010Q57S62/
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Click to collapse
I am using this SanDisk 128 GB Micro SDXC UHS-1 / Class 10 card and it works fine! The price/performance is good.
In germany (Amazon.de) you can get the card for 33 € (+shipping costs).
nephtys59 said:
Hi,
I'm considering this microSD for my new tablet s2, do you think is good quality?
http://www.amazon.it/Memoria-SanDisk-Android-MicroSDXC-Adattatore/dp/B010Q57S62/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For our fast S2, this one is too slow in writing. Class 10 means only fast reading.
You better choose a Samsung or SanDisk with the "U3" designation, which means fast writing, like this:
http://www.amazon.it/Scheda-Memoria...sr=1-5&keywords=sandisk+extreme+pro+microsdxc
FOR EVERYBODY :
I have bought a LEXAR 633x 200GB !!!
And it works !
Speed : read 95Mo/s write : 40Mo/s
For 90$, it do the job very well !
The only better sdcard is the 256GB SAMSUNG but it's out of price !
​
So a higher performance card or 200GB eill make the tab s2 go faster then? What amount of storage and sd card do you recommend?
It won't make the tab S2 go faster. But it will allow faster read/writing to higher performance sd card compared to a regular one. The S2 can only go as fast as it's hardware can, with or without a microsd card.
Figured I'd share my results with my 2015 S2 8.0 (SM-T710). Right now I have a Samsung EVO Pro (U1) 64GB in my tablet and it does ok, but I'm just about to upgrade it to a new 128GB EVO PLUS (U3) card so got some results below. Note the previous 32GB card I had was waay worse, much older and only did 4MB/sec on writes (forgot the brand) but things have at least come a long way in the years since.
Results as follows...
Samsung EVO Pro 64GB (U1) - 70.53MB/sec Read - 72.86MB/sec Write (Fresh Format)
Samsung EVO Plus 128GB (U3) - 69.91MB/sec Read - 43.40MB/sec Write (Fresh Format)
Samsung EVO Pro 64GB (U1) - 70.07MB/sec Read - 17.81MB/sec Write (Only 4.9GB Free)
Samsung EVO Plus 128GB (U3) - 63.08MB/sec Read - 27.12MB/sec Write (Only 65.9GB Free)
For the heck of it tried the transfer rates on the PC for the 2 cards as well.
Samsung EVO Pro 64GB (U1) - 86.85MB/sec Read - 80.77MB/sec Write (Fresh Format)
Samsung EVO Plus 128GB (U3) - 87.04MB/sec Read - 82.27MB/sec Write (Fresh Format)
Though got to say while cards neck and neck, small file writes where 5x greater on the new U3 card (.5MB/sec vs 2.5MB/sec) on 4k writes.

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