Hi John ...

Thanks for posting this info.

Shel 

> [Original Message]
> From: John Celio 


> > Are all SD cards more or less equal, given storage volume?
>
> Oh god no!  Not even close.

> There are some very important things to know about memory cards before
you 
> go and buy one, but unfortunately these things can be hard to find out
from 
> the memory manufacturers.
>
> One of the things I do at my job is image recovery for customers whose 
> memory cards have become unreadable for whatever reason.  I get about six
or 
> seven image recovery requests per week, and I've noticed some trends:
>
>  -- The majority of memory cards that come to me with problems are those 
> cheapass SanDisk cards that are sold just about everywhere (especially at 
> places like Costco and Wal*Mart).  Note: this group does not include
Ultra 
> or Extreme cards.
>  -- The next largest group of cards to come to me are "no name" memory 
> cards.  "No name" refers to cards from a brand no one (in my lab, anyway) 
> has heard of or cards with no brand at all.  Many of these cards come
from 
> online retailers who package them with a camera to sweeten the deal, or
from 
> the customer having to purchase more memory from a tourist trap while 
> travelling.
>  -- The smallest group consists of "professional" cards.  In the last
couple 
> weeks, I've seen two SanDisk Ultra IIs, one SanDisk Extreme, and one
Lexar 
> Professional (which is the brand I use, and which I actually rarely see
come 
> to me with problems).
>
> What separates these groups?
>
> Memory manufacturers generally have three tiers of quality, and they
affect 
> the speed and reliability of the memory in each tier.
>
> Tier 3: This is the cheap stuff.  Cheapass SanDisk cards fall in this 
> category, as well as most other cheapass memory you find (this includes 
> cheapass memory you can buy for your computer and whatnot).  If you were
to 
> open a tier 3 memory card, you would see more than one piece of flash 
> memory.  If, for example, you bought a 512mb card and opened it up, you 
> would most likely see four pieces of 128mb flash memory inside.  These 
> modules are cheaper to produce, and so the manufacturers produce them en 
> masse and combine them into larger capacity cards.  More memory modules 
> means higher chances of getting defective memory, as well as slower
transfer 
> rates, but lower prices.  Consumers buy this stuff because they think 
> they're getting a good deal, but in fact they're playing roulette with
their 
> data.
>
> Tier 2: This stuff is usually produced from a couple memory modules, but
not 
> as many as Tier 3 cards.  The modules have higher capacities (in some
cases 
> there is only one piece of memory in tier 2 cards) and are usually
produced 
> under tighter quality controls.  These cards are faster than tier 3
cards, 
> but not always as fast as Tier 1 (though they can be very fast).
>
> Tier 1: This is the high-end stuff.  You generally get what you pay for
with 
> tier 1 cards.  They are made from a single memory module, and are
generally 
> very fast (depending on the technology available at the time they were 
> designed, of course).  They are produced under the tightest quality 
> controls, and are often tested at the factory before being shipped. 
Lexar 
> Professional, SanDisk Extreme, and SanDisk Ultra cards fall under this 
> category, but in my experience with so many bad cards, the Lexar 
> Professional cards seem to be the most reliable (though admittedly not 
> always as fast as the SanDisk cards)
>
>
> So, after learning all this, it has become my opinion that, when buying 
> memory, one should spend the extra money and get professional-quality
stuff. 
> You really do get what you pay for.
>
> John Celio


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