PNY Elite Performance 64GB High Speed SDXC Class 10 UHS-1 Up to 90MB/sec Flash Card – P-SDX64U1H-GE
- Up to 90MB/sec speed for the ultimate transfer rates
- Ideal for High Performance DSLR cameras and HD camcorders, especially for ultra fast action shots, sports video, HD video and other professional-quality photography
- Class 10 UHS-1 performance allows fast and smooth continuous shooting, multiple frames per second and full HD Video capture
- Fast speed performance minimizes time spent transferring photos and video to your computer
- Stores approximately 22,762 photos so you can shoot more shots with fewer downloads
- Reliable & Durable: Magnet Proof, Shock Proof, Temperature Proof, Waterproof
- Compatible with SDHC and SDXC devices
- Backed by a Lifetime Limited Warranty
FLASH MEMORY CARD – 64 GB – SDXC MEMORY CARD
List Price: $ 39.99
Price: [wpramaprice asin=”B00HIKBW1G”]
[wpramareviews asin=”B00HIKBW1G”]
READ THIS BEFORE BUYING ANY MEMORY CARD OVER 32GB!!!,
Good to keep in mind when buying a memory card for phone or computer:
Newer sd/micro sd memory cards that are bigger than 32gb DO NOT run on the traditional memory system of FAT32 which many devices (like windows and blackberry) mostly used until the year 2012.
Rather these bigger sized cards run on an upgraded system called exFAT which many devices do not recognize yet.
So if you buy a micro sd card for your bb/iphone/galaxy/etc. Make sure that if the memory card is over 32gb, that your device can handle it (see following link). Otherwise just stick with 32gb card or lower. For use on a computer (windows/Mac), you can upgrade the computer software to run exfat and then use the card on your computer.
All explained simply and in short over here of how to tell what works with which memory cards:
[…]
Click here for a link to update your windows 7/vista/xp or Mac software to recognize exFat:
[…]
You can also just convert the card from exFat to Fat32 using the “SmartDisk Fat32 format utility” could help.
This info could/will save you lots of trouble.
[…]
Have a wonderful day 🙂
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Another SD Card That Joins the UHS-1 Ranks,
The card is made in Japan. Lifetime Limited Warranty in the USA.
I use a Transcend USB 3.0 Super Speed Multi-Card Reader for SD/SDHC/SDXC/MS/CF Cards (TS-RDF8K) that is connected to my USB 3.0 slot for a Read/Write test.
Also, testing with a IOGEAR USB 2.0 Hub and 45-in-1 Card Reader GUH287 (Black) for USB 2.0 slot Read/Write test.
I used a program that writes a 500MB file 5 times and averages the results
PNY Elite Performance 90 MB/s (32GB card)
USB 3.0
Read 96.75 MB/s
Write 63. MB/s
USB 2.0
Read 20.04 MB/s
Write 19.49 MB/s
Sandisk Extreme 45 MB/s (32GB card)
USB 3.0
Read 44.48 MB/s
Write 42.15 MB/s
USB 2.0
Read 20.10 MB/s
Write 19.50 MB/s
Sandisk ExtremePRO 95 MB/s (32GB card)
(coming soon, currently lent out).
The Sandisk Extreme is still an UHS-1 Card and I just wanted to include it until my extreme pro is back in my hands.
The key thing about the speed (transfer rate from memory card to computer) is that you really need USB 3.0 in order to see those fast transfer speed numbers. As for electronic devices, if the devices are UHS-1 compatible you should be able to see the benefits. In some cases like DSLRs, the write to card is limited by the buffer or the memory slot unit. Be back in a few months, testing it to see if it can handle photography gigs with my D600.
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Some cards might be knock off! CARD FULL ERROR!,
After reading all the rave reviews of this card and seeing it being on sale, I decided on giving the PNY 64GB Elite Performance UHS-I 90MB/s card a try.
It worked great for a day giving the speeds that most people talked about (60MB/s roughly when writing). Then as I was shooting a real event (I’m a professional photo/videographer) on a trip in Mexico, I got a “Card Full” error, even though the card was only 10% full. It crashed my camera.
I tried to read the card on my computer, and couldn’t access any data. Now I have to go to a Data Recovery place and pay $150 to retrieve the lost photos. (9/17 update : I have permanently lost my data, Data Recovery place could not recuperate the lost data :(…)
Buy this card at your own risk as some of them might be “knock-off” cards… If you shoot things that are not important and not professionally, then it’s fine.
I have owned dozens of SD cards in the past, from all brands, from Transcend to Sandisk to Kingston to Panasonic, in all kinds of flavors. This is the first time ever I’ve had an SD card fail on me after Day 2.
I would say stick to the Transcend / Sandisk / Panasonic / Kingston cards if your work is important…
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