SanDisk 128GB Extreme microSDXC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter – Up to 160MB/s, C10, U3, V30, 4K, A2, Micro SD – SDSQXA1-128G-GN6MA
$17.30
From the manufacturer
Save time transferring content
Quick read speeds of up to 160MB/s* [100MB/s for 32GB] let you transfer 1000 high-resolution photos and 30 minutes of 4K video (24GB) in less than 3 minutes.⁸
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Capture frames faster
Capture fast-action photos or shoot 4K UHD video² with write speeds of up to 90MB/s.* The SanDisk Extreme microSDXC UHS-I Card lets you shoot more and faster.
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Great for Capturing 4K UHD Video²
Ideal for recording events without skipping frames. The SanDisk Extreme microSD UHS-I card lets you capture uninterrupted 4K UHD and Full HD video with U3 and V30 ratings.⁵
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Easy File Recovery with RescuePRO Deluxe Software
The card comes with a RescuePRO Deluxe data recovery software download offer.⁶ This software makes it easy to recover files that have been accidentally deleted (download required).
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Durable Design for Use in Extreme Environments
The card is shockproof, temperature-proof, waterproof, and X-ray-proof,⁴ so you can enjoy your adventures without worrying about the durability of your memory card.
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SanDisk Extreme 128GB
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MobileMate USB 3.0 Reader
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128GB Card & Reader Bundle
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Video QualityCapture uninterrupted 4K UHD and Full HD video without skipping frames |
Move Files Fast10X faster than with USB 2.0 readers⁸ with the performance of USB 3.0 |
Capture Hi-res video FastCapture uninterrupted 4K UHD video anytime anywhere |
Read SpeedUp to 160MB/s* means shorter wait times when transferring files |
Read SpeedUp to 160MB/s⁹ so you can move big files (or a lot of files) fast |
Read SpeedUp to 160MB/s⁹ so you can move files fast |
Write SpeedUp to 90MB/s* enables you to capture fast action in full detail |
Compact & DurableTake it anywhere—built to hold its own when tossed in your bag |
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Performance RatingRecord and shoot faster with C10, U3, and V30, and load apps faster with A2 |
USB 3.0-CompatibleThe reader is compatible with USB 3.0 and backwards-compatible with USB 2.0 |
Specification: SanDisk 128GB Extreme microSDXC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter – Up to 160MB/s, C10, U3, V30, 4K, A2, Micro SD – SDSQXA1-128G-GN6MA
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Photos: SanDisk 128GB Extreme microSDXC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter – Up to 160MB/s, C10, U3, V30, 4K, A2, Micro SD – SDSQXA1-128G-GN6MA
10 reviews for SanDisk 128GB Extreme microSDXC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter – Up to 160MB/s, C10, U3, V30, 4K, A2, Micro SD – SDSQXA1-128G-GN6MA
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$17.30
Fyhy –
Basically it does what it’s supposed to do. I got this as a spare for my drone, and it works great. After years of using it’s still working flawlessly.I know you can probably catch this listing cheaper on one of the sale days that happens every so often. But overall if you live in BFE like I do, and have to go extremely out of your way to a Walmart at the best scenario, for the possibility they don’t even have what you need with select specs you need, could be out of stock, or just don’t carry what you are looking for. It’s just simpler to shop online, and order it and forget it, at least until it arrives.Overall I can’t complain one bit with this purchase! Got exactly what I was looking for, and even needed, price was fine, quality was good, specs was solid, everything was good! So yeah solid buy in all honesty. Fully recommend.
akl5075 –
Reliable brand with fast data transfer speeds. Can use with cell phone, digital camera, or any other device that uses microSD storage.
Mike –
Very hard to give a reasonable evaluation of how much BETTER, than my other cards, would say it is very good, great capacity. All in all, think it is better than my extreme, and much better than Ultra.
John EJohn E –
I am reviewing and comparing two different memory cards, the Amazon basics 256gb and the SanDisk Extreme 256gb card.First is price, the Amazon basics is a several dollars less than the SanDisk (at this moment 23.72 vs 36.99). Currently Amazon says there is a newer version of the SanDisk for 24.85, however I have not purchased or tested the newer version.The two cards:”SanDisk 256GB Extreme microSDXC UHS-I Memory Card with Adapter – Up to 160MB/s, C10, U3, V30, 4K, A2, Micro SD – SDSQXA1-256G-GN6MA””Amazon Basics microSDXC Memory Card with Full Size Adapter, A2, U3, Read Speed up to 100 MB/s, 256 GB”Tested using:CrystalDiskMark 5.5.0 x64.Computer is a 4-year-old “NUC8i7HVK” running Windows 10, and it has a built in SD card reader (Intel calls it “SDXC with UHS-I support”). This interface is what I call “SD reader” in the accompanying screen captures.I also tested using a SanDisk USB 3 adapter “SanDisk MobileMate USB 3.0 microSD Card Reader- SDDR-B531-GN6NN”. This interface is what I call USB3 in the accompanying screen captures.First, I noticed a UK review where the reviewer noted the Amazon basics card seems to be missing 5 gigabytes of storage even when the (confusing) translation from computer storage gigabytes (1024 x 1024 x 1024 = 1,073,741,824 bytes vs 1000 x 1000 x 1000 = 1,000,000,000 bytes) vs “we sell storage” gigabytes.You will notice CrystalDiskMark reports the Amazon basic card as 233GiB versus the 238GiB of the SanDisk, so he is very correct. I have no clue why the discrepancy, but it is slightly smaller than it should be.Second, to get the real read/write speed of the SanDisk card, you will notice I had to use the SanDisk USB 3 adapter. Using the built in SD card reader, both cards were very close to identical results.Using the SanDisk USB 3 adapter, I did manage to exceed the ratings for the SanDisk card (up to 160 MB/s read, and up to 90 MB/s write) giving 169 read and 105 write. The Amazon basic card did have a slight change using the SanDisk adapter, but really not significant.Both cards were close enough to their claimed specs to not worry about it, however it should be noted that you need the SanDisk adapter to actually get the much higher speeds of the SanDisk.I will be using the Amazon basic card to store children’s movies for my granddaughter to play on her new Kindle, it is plenty fast enough reading to do full HD movies.Note that both cards were brand new when tested and had never had anything written or read from them prior to the test. The Amazon basic seems a good value and is certainly adequate for normal use in a cell phone or laptop. The SanDisk would really shine if you used the adapter to move lots of larger files to it.Older review:I’ve now purchased this card 3 times from Amazon (as seller) and I’m very satisfied. Used in Moto g7 and Moto g7 power phones with excellent results!Mine was sold by Amazon, and certainly is a fast card. Installed in a Moto G7, tested at 89 read, 59 write using A1 SD benchmark for android. Maybe not the rated speed, but Motorola phones have a history of bad SD compatibility. Tested others, and this card is significantly faster. Very happy with the product.Note that I’ve attached some results testing on a PC with a Lexmark reader, thus it doesn’t attain its full speed.
Andy A. –
Works well, it’s a solid and reliable sd card.
dawn francis –
Not really much to say about a chip. It works great for the drone footage and making videos.
Snake Eater –
Got the 512 GB model to expand on the Steam Deck’s admittedly limited storage. Even if you got the largest storage model of the Deck (512 GB) it can fill up quickly. Games are just bigger nowadays. I think the newest Call of Duty is like 150 gigs.Just like every storage manufacturer, they advertise the storage in “GB” instead of “GiB”, so when you actually plug it into a computer you lose some space in the conversion. In this case, after you format it on the Steam Deck (ext4 I believe) you end up with 468.2 GB of usable space. Which admittedly is a tiny bit bigger than the Deck’s own 465.3 GB of usable space on the 512 model. It seems like every storage mfr. has their own way of making this GB/GiB calculation, and it’s just plain annoying how they always favor giving you less storage than it says on the label. It’s so common now it’s pretty much standard practice with them, so what can you do. But losing 9% of your storage space is never fun, so it’s always worth complaining about again.The largest game I have loaded on this card is Horizon Zero Dawn Complete Edition, which is 73.48 GB. And the stories are true, it loads pretty much just as fast as the Steam Deck’s own SSD. The game’s intro comes with a few somewhat lengthy cutscenes, and game developers have gotten pretty good at hiding the loading screens in the background now, but still there was absolutely no wait at all between gameplay sections. In fact, I have another older game “Destroy All Humans!” (2005) on the Deck’s SSD that has more hard loading screens, and it just “feels” like it takes longer to launch and load new levels than Horizon Zero Dawn on the micro SD card. HZD had a few times where it would stutter during the intro cutscenes, and drop to 20 FPS very momentarily, but for some reason this seemed to clear up after about 30 mins in, and otherwise ran at around 35-45 FPS. Definitely watchable. Gameplay was much smoother, had absolutely no stutters, and ran really consistently at around 40 FPS. Definitely playable.And not all of that may be down to the card. I’m not sure if Horizon Zero Dawn uses pre-rendered cutscenes or not (basically a video file), but it might explain the odd stuttering that only happened during cutscenes, and not during gameplay. However you would think streaming even a 4k video file should be easy, stutter-less task for this card. Another reason could be Steam’s own weird download behavior: if you want to download multiple games at the same time to load your new card up, each time you click “Install” on a new game, Steam will interrupt whatever download it was currently working on and immediately start downloading the game you just clicked on, putting whatever it was downloading before into a queue. As far as I know, there’s no way to just add games directly to the queue, to have them each download 1-at-a-time uninterrupted. If there is that option I haven’t found it yet. (You would think this would be the default behavior anyway.) This means when I clicked on 8 different games to start downloading at the same time, each time I clicked on the next one it would pause the current download at around 1% complete, and only pick it back up again once the last one I clicked on completed. This causes pretty bad fragmentation in your game data, with the first 1% of 8 different games stored at the beginning of the card. But it could explain the rare stuttering in the intro cutscenes that somehow miraculously cleared up after a little while. Solid-state storage is supposed to have much better random IOPS read performance than HDDs, but no matter what when you’ve got fragmented data you’re going to get slower speeds than continuous reads.FYI, you can transfer games between 2 different micro SD cards directly on the Deck. I was using a temporary 64 GB card while waiting until this one arrived, and my Windows computer couldn’t read the ext4 or whatever filesystem Deck uses, and I didn’t want to mess around with new drivers to get that to work. But with a few USB-C to USB-A adapters and micro SD card reader, it’s easy to do on the Deck itself. It won’t show up on the Deck’s Storage menu of the main interface, so you have to hold the power button down and switch to Desktop mode, where you can use the standard file browser to copy things over. Keep this in mind before you start troubleshooting your wonky series of daisy-chained adapters/card readers because you think they aren’t working. And make sure you format the new card first.Another FYI: I had a little scare thinking I bricked my Deck or something when I first installed this card. I made sure to completely shut down the Deck before swapping SD cards, but I think that confused the bootloader. When I turned it back on the Deck had a completely blank, black screen, and Steam didn’t load. It turned out the boot order somehow got switched, and it was trying to find the Steam OS on the new microSD card instead of the Deck’s SSD. To fix this is easy, while it’s off hold ‘Volume Down’ and click the Power Button – when you hear the chime, let go of the Volume Down button, and you’ll be booted into the Boot Manager. There you can fix the boot order, and I haven’t had it happen again since. Just search “steam deck recovery” online for more info, Valve has great instructions.
Paul Arango –
I use this for my Miyoo Mini Plus and it works as intended. It’s fast and can hold a lot of games on it. Just be careful not to lose it or damage it since the card is really small. Very happy with it though, plus SanDisk is my go-to brand so I highly recommend!
Amazon Customer –
audio file transfer .
Kindle Customer –
Plenty of room, video runs smoothly.