Difference between revisions of "SD Cards"

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The UHS class 3 devices are available from a few vendors for about the same price, why would you buy anything else?
 
The UHS class 3 devices are available from a few vendors for about the same price, why would you buy anything else?
  
Link to the SD cards tested with a Raspberry PI. [http://elinux.org/RPi_SD_cards#SD_card_performance]
+
Link to the SD cards tested with a Raspberry PI. [http://elinux.org/RPi_SD_cards#SD_card_performance PI SD Cards]
  
 
''Last edited 5-25-2015''
 
''Last edited 5-25-2015''

Latest revision as of 13:18, 31 May 2015

The package for a SD card may say Ultra High Speed Pro, but the markings on the card tell the truth. These markings are defined by the SD Card association. The write speed is slower than the read speed, since the memory must be cleared before writing new data.

Capacity markings

SD up to 2 Gbytes

SDHC (High capacity) 4G to 32G

SDXC (Extended capacity) 64G to 2Terabytes

Standard SD Cards

The maximum standard SD interface speed is 25 MBytes/second.

Write speed markings

circle 2 - 2 Mbytes/sec

circle 4 - 4 Mbytes/sec

circle 6 - 6 Mbytes/sec

circle 8 - 8 Mbytes/sec

circle 10 - 10 Mbytes/sec

Interface speeds

(1) Default Speed mode: 3.3V signaling, Frequency up to 25 MHz, up to 12.5 MB/sec

(2) High Speed mode: 3.3V signaling, Frequency up to 50 MHz, up to 25 MB/sec

UHS SD Cards

The UHS-I and UHS_II specifications adds faster interface speeds. Note that the host controller must support these interface options for the faster interfaces. These higher speed cards are backwards compatible, so you can use them with older hardware. The UHS-I interface runs at up to 104 Mbytes/sec, and the UHS-II up to 312Mbyte/sec.

Write speed markings

U1 - 10 Mbytes/sec write speed

U3 - 30 Mbytes/sec write speed

Interface speeds supported

(1) Default Speed mode: 3.3V signaling, Frequency up to 25 MHz, up to 12.5 MB/sec

(2) High Speed mode: 3.3V signaling, Frequency up to 50 MHz, up to 25 MB/sec

(3) SDR12: UHS-I 1.8V signaling, Frequency up to 25 MHz, up to 12.5MB/sec

(4) SDR25: UHS-I 1.8V signaling, Frequency up to 50 MHz, up to 25MB/sec

(5) SDR50: UHS-I 1.8V signaling, Frequency up to 100 MHz, up to 50MB/sec

(6) SDR104: UHS-I 1.8V signaling, Frequency up to 208 MHz, up to 104MB/sec

(7) DDR50: UHS-I 1.8V signaling, Frequency up to 50 MHz, sampled on both clock edges, up to 50MB/sec

(8) UHS156: UHS-II RCLK Frequency Range 26MHz - 52MHz, up to 1.56Gbps per lane.

(9) UHS312: UHS-II RCLK Frequency Range 26MHz - 52MHz, up to 1.56Gbps two lanes half duplex

The UHS class 3 devices are available from a few vendors for about the same price, why would you buy anything else?

Link to the SD cards tested with a Raspberry PI. PI SD Cards

Last edited 5-25-2015