Digital cameras and camcorders employ memory cards (flash-based removable media) for storage of captured content. There are different varieties of memory cards catering to various performance levels. CompactFlash (CF) became popular in the late 90s, but, has now been overtaken by Secure Digital (SD) cards. Many computing systems (PCs as well as smartphones) also support SD / microSD cards for augmenting local storage capabilities. We recently started in-depth evaluation of the performance of various memory cards. This piece evaluates one of the highest capacity microSDXC card currently available in the market - the PNY Elite microSDXC UHS-I 512GB version.

Introduction

SD (Secure Digital) cards were introduced in 1999, as an update to the existing MultiMediaCards (MMCs). It gained traction even in areas where CompactFlash had been preferred, thanks to its small size. Its popularity is evident by the fact that it has spawned two follow-ups in the same form factor - starting with the SDSC in 1999 for capacities between 1MB and 2GB, we got SD High Capacity (SDHC) in 2006 (up to 32GB) and SD eXtended Capacity (SDXC) in 2009 (up to 2TB). The cards also come in various sizes - standard, mini, and micro. Currently, the standard and micro sizes are more popular in the market. SD's popularity and affordability has meant that almost all consumer cameras come with a SD card slot.

Recently, we have seen a number of high-capacity microSDXC cards getting introduced. Starting with the 400GB SanDisk Ultra microSDXC UHS-I card ($153 at $0.3825/GB) introduced in August 2017, we now have the Integral 512GB and the PNY Elite 512GB in the market as well. At Computex 2018, we also saw plans from ADATA and Team Group to sell 512GB microSDXC cards. With the industry migrating to 3D NAND, the capacity per die has seen significant increase, allowing for microSDXC cards to reach these capacities. The PNY Elite microSDXC 512GB is a UHS-I card with a Class 10 (Speed Class) / U1 (UHS Speed Class) / V10 (Video Speed Class) rating.

PNY supplied us with a retail sample of their Elite 512GB card to put through our comprehensive memory card evaluation routine. Prior to taking a look at the performance numbers, we take a look at the testbed setup and evaluation methodology.

Testbed Setup and Performance Benchmarks

Evaluation of memory cards is done on Windows with the testbed outlined in the table below. The USB 3.1 Type-C port in the testbed is enabled by the Intel Alpine Ridge controller. It connects to the Z170 PCH via a PCIe 3.0 x4 link. uSD cards utilize the Lexar Professional Workflow SR2 SDHC / SDXC UHS-II USB 3.0 Reader along with a microSD to SD adapter. For this particular review, we used the adapter supplied along with the PNY Elite card in its retail package. The reader was placed in the Lexar Professional Workflow HR2 hub and uplinked through its USB 3.0 port with the help of a USB 3.0 Type-A female to Type-C male cable.

AnandTech DAS Testbed Configuration
Motherboard GIGABYTE Z170X-UD5 TH ATX
CPU Intel Core i5-6600K
Memory G.Skill Ripjaws 4 F4-2133C15-8GRR
32 GB ( 4x 8GB)
DDR4-2133 @ 15-15-15-35
OS Drive Samsung SM951 MZVPV256 NVMe 256 GB
SATA Devices Corsair Neutron XT SSD 480 GB
Intel SSD 730 Series 480 GB
Add-on Card None
Chassis Cooler Master HAF XB EVO
PSU Cooler Master V750 750 W
OS Windows 10 Pro x64
Thanks to Cooler Master, GIGABYTE, G.Skill and Intel for the build components

The full details of the reasoning behind choosing the above build components can be found here.

Sequential Accesses

PNY claims speeds of up to 90 MBps, but, as the speed ratings (Class 10 / U1 / V10) indicate, this is only for the reads. Real-world write speeds are bound to be much slower. For most applications, that really doesn't matter as long as the card is capable of sustaining the maximum possible rate at which the camera it is used in dumps data. We use fio workloads to emulate typical camera recording conditions. We run the workload on a fresh card, and also after simulating extended usage. Instantaneous bandwidth numbers are graphed. This gives an idea of performance consistency (whether there is appreciable degradation in performance as the amount of pre-existing data increases and / or the card is subject to wear and tear in terms of amount and type of NAND writes). Further justification and details of the testing parameters are available here.

With a fresh card, the writes are consistently above 20 MBps, but, after extended usage, we see dips down to the 17 - 18 MBps range. In both scenarios, the card manages to keep itself well clear of the minimum requirements for its speed rating. The read speeds meet PNY's claims of being in the 90 MBps range. Almost all of the other microSDXC cards that we have evaluated before have higher sustained write rates, but, none of them belong to the same capacity class as the PNY Elite card.

AnandTech DAS Suite - Performance Consistency

The AnandTech DAS Suite involves transferring large amounts of photos and videos to and from the storage device using robocopy. This is followed by selected workloads from PCMark 8's storage benchmark in order to evaluate scenarios such as importing media files directly into multimedia editing programs such as Adobe Photoshop. Details of these tests from the perspective of memory cards are available here.

In this subsection, we deal with performance consistency while processing the robocopy segment. The graph below shows the read and write transfer rates to the memory card while the robocopy processes took place in the background. The data for writing to the card resides in a RAM drive in the testbed. The first three sets of writes and reads correspond to the photos suite. A small gap (for the transfer of the videos suite from the primary drive to the RAM drive) is followed by three sets for the next data set. Another small RAM-drive transfer gap is followed by three sets for the Blu-ray folder. The corresponding graphs for similar cards that we have evaluated before is available via the drop-down selection.

Typical of almost all memory cards, we see small files bringing down the write rates, but, the key takeaway here is that there is no consistency issue between two passes for the same data.

AnandTech DAS Suite - Bandwidth

The average transfer rates for each workload from the previous section is graphed below. Readers can get a quantitative number to compare the PNY Elite microSDXC UHS I 512GB uSD card against the ones that we have evaluated before.

Photos Read

We also look at the PCMark 8 storage bench numbers in the graphs below. Note that the bandwidth number reported in the results don't involve idle time compression. Results might appear low, but that is part of the workload characteristic. Note that the same testbed is being used for all memory cards. Therefore, comparing the numbers for each trace should be possible across different cards.

Adobe Photoshop Light Read

The performance numbers here reflect the speed class rating of the card. As mentioned in the sequential writes section for the typical photo / video recording workload, the PNY Elite is not a speed play. Rather, it is a capacity play, which is not reflected well in this evaluation segment.

Performance Restoration

The traditional memory card use-case is to delete the files on it after the import process is completed. Some prefer to format the card either using the PC, or, through the options available in the camera menu. The first option is not a great one, given that flash-based storage devices run into bandwidth issues if garbage collection (processes such as TRIM) is not run regularly. Different memory cards have different ways to bring them to a fresh state.Based on our experience, uSD cards have to be formatted using the SD Formatter tool from the SD Association (after all the partitions are removed using the 'clean' command in diskpart).

In order to test out the effectiveness of the performance restoration process, we run the default sequential workloads in CrystalDiskMark before and after the formatting. Note that this is at the end of all our benchmark runs, and the card is in a used state at the beginning of the process. The corresponding screenshots for similar cards that we have evaluated before is available via the drop-down selection.

We do see a drop in the write rate after performance restoration, but, it is similar to the numbers we see in the sustained write workload. The performance is still better than the requirements of the claimed speed rating.

Concluding Remarks

The PNY Elite microSDXC UHS-I 512GB card successfully completed our intensive benchmarking routines. It showed great performance consistency, but, emerged as an average / low-end performer with respect to the raw benchmark numbers.

In addition to raw performance and consistency, pricing is also an important aspect. This is particularly important in the casual user and semi-professional markets, where the value for money metric often trumps benchmark numbers. The table below presents the relevant data for the PNY Elite microSDXC UHS I 512GB uSD card and other similar ones that we have evaluated before. The cards are ordered by the $/GB metric.

uSD Cards - Pricing
Card Model Number Capacity (GB) Street Price (USD) Price per GB (USD/GB)
SanDisk Extreme microSDXC UHS I 128GB SDSQXAF-128G-GN6MA 128 49 0.3828125
PNY Elite microSDXC UHS I 512GB P-SDU512U190EL-GE 512 350 0.68359375
ADATA XPG microSDXC UHS I 64GB AUSDX64GXUI3-RA1 64 50 0.78125
ADATA Premier ONE microSDXC UHS II 256GB AUSDX256GUII3CL10-C 256 286 1.1171875
Lexar 1800x 128GB LSDMI128CRBNA1800R 128 167 1.3046875
SanDisk Extreme PRO microSDXC UHS II 128GB SDSQXPJ-128G-GN6M3 128 208 1.625

The PNY Elite card is not meant to be a benchmarks winner - rather, PNY wants to focus on the market segment which requires high capacity. This is an attractive card for content creators in the field who want to record a lot of content between imports to a bigger PC or network-connected mass storage device. It also targets users who can't afford the downtime / recording break that is inevitable during card swaps (when using smaller capacity cards). The SanDisk Ultra microSDXC UHS-I card ($153 at $0.3825/GB) also targets the same market segment with a similar speed rating, and it has a significantly lower per-GB cost. However, the PNY Elite does edge it out with a slightly higher capacity (512GB vs. 400GB). As indicated by its speed rating, the PNY Elite doesn't sport enough performance to consistently record videos with very high bitrates. But, it should be more than enough for content in the 80 Mbps range.

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  • PixyMisa - Tuesday, September 18, 2018 - link

    Price - ouch. I'll go with the 400GB Sandisk.
  • tiro_uspsss - Tuesday, September 18, 2018 - link

    umm.. in the price comparison table, it has the second lowest $/GB. It only has the highest outright price because it has the highest capacity - double the nearest.
  • ozzuneoj86 - Tuesday, September 18, 2018 - link

    umm... the 400GB Sandisk isn't in the chart. The last paragraph of the article specifically says:

    The SanDisk Ultra microSDXC UHS-I card ($153 at $0.3825/GB) also targets the same market segment with a similar speed rating, and it has a significantly lower per-GB cost.

    Right now the Sandisk is only $142. It costs 60% less and is only 20% lower capacity.
  • JanW1 - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    What's up with the comma after every "but"? Makes for really annoying reading.

    A few of them are correct, but most are not (see, no comma). Really the only reason there would be a comma after a "but" is a parenthetical statement, as in "PNY claims speeds of up to 90 MBps, but, as the speed ratings (Class 10 / U1 / V10) indicate, this is only for the reads."
  • jordanclock - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    You're absolutely right and now I cannot ignore all of the extra commas.
  • zodiacfml - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    Device manufacturers should stop crippling their devices by limiting it to 4k @ 30 fps and low bit rates. Only a Pro with the expensive tools can make use of these capacities.
  • eastcoast_pete - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    I agree, and the fact that only the most recent (and costliest) Android phones just now introduced 4k60p video capabilities (Sammy's Newest) while Apple's iPhones had it for over a year is downright shameful. The absence of better video capabilities is one reason why I don't consider the newest (2018/19) Kirin 980 Huawei flagship phones actual "flagships" - they're stuck at 4kp30, w/o full stabilization.
  • abufrejoval - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    Half a terabyte on a fingernail and people here only complain about price?

    My first experience at removable media were 5MB RK05 and 10MB DL10 on a PDP-11/34: You needed both hands to carry those!

    And just how many of these could you fit into a RAIF inside the physical form factor of current 14TB hard disks? Is there any CPU out there that could come even close to saturate the bandwidth of such a wide RAIF? At least latency is still a bucket of cold water...

    On the other hand I remember dropping a 4GB microSD somewhere sitting on my sofa and my frustration because I couldn't find or dig it out again: Too small!

    I'm not too anxious handling or even loosing 32GB microSD cards these days: They are the new floppy disks, but the thought of losing half a tera of family pictures at a slight bend, makes me cringe.

    These 2.5" SATA FF units have a much bigger feel of solidity, even if on the insides these days they are mostly just thin air.
  • jordanclock - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    RAIF? Or RAID? Regardless, you'll find that even a RAID array of these wouldn't perform very well. I don't think there are any good RAID controllers for SD cards AND you'll get less-than-perfect scaling of ~20MBps writes and ~90MBps reads.

    You can bring up "wow things are so much more advanced!" but this is still a halo product that is meant for a small niche of people that can afford to pay out the nose for the absolutely highest capacity and don't mind waiting literally hours to write a full disk.
  • Buddy49 - Saturday, September 22, 2018 - link

    Yes

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