| Brand | SanDisk |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | SanDisk |
| Series | SDCZ880-256G-G46 Cruzer Extreme |
| Product Dimensions | 7.09 x 2.13 x 1.14 cm; 18.14 Grams |
| Item model number | SDCZ880-256G-G46 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Color | Black |
| RAM Size | 256 GB |
| Hard Drive Size | 256 GB |
| Hard Disk Description | HDD |
| Voltage | 240 Volts |
| Wattage | 5 |
| Power Source | Handbetrieben |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Item Weight | 18.1 g |
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SanDisk Extreme PRO Solid State USB Flash Drive USB 3.1
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| Colour | Black |
| Memory storage capacity | 256 GB |
| Brand | SanDisk |
| Hardware interface | USB |
| Flash memory type | USB |
About this item
- Make sure this fits by entering your model number.
- Read speeds of up to 420 MB/s and plenty of space for your important files.
- The password protection of the USB drive uses 128-bit AES encryption and is supported by Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10 and Mac OS X v10.7+.
- The USB stick comes in a high-quality design with a robust aluminium housing.
- The USB drive is backwards compatible with USB 3.0 and USB 2.0 ports.
- Box contents: SanDisk Extreme PRO USB 3.2 solid state flash drive 256 GB (password protection, robust housing, RescuePRo Deluxe software)
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This item SanDisk Extreme PRO Solid State USB Flash Drive USB 3.1 | Corsair Flash Voyager GTX 256 GB USB 3.1 Memory Stick Black | Patriot Supersonic Rage Pro USB 3.2 Gen 1 High Performance 256 GB USB Stick | Transcend Highspeed USB Stick 256GB JetFlash 920 USB 3.1 420/400MB/s TS256GJF920 | SanDisk Extreme PRO 128GB USB 3.2 Solid State Flash Drive - SDCZ880-128G-GAM46 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Customer Rating | 4.7 out of 5 stars (9358) | 4.6 out of 5 stars (5444) | 4.3 out of 5 stars (250) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (670) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (365) |
| Price | €57.90 | €84.90 | €49.29 | €53.65 | €93.51 |
| Sold By | Amazon.de | Amazon.de | Amazon.de | Amazon.de | AURORABOUTIQUES |
| Colour | Black | black | black | space grey | — |
| Hardware Interface | USB | USB 3.0 | USB 3.0 | USB 3.0 | USB 3.2 Gen 1 |
| Item Dimensions | 7.09 x 2.13 x 1.14 cm | 1.07 x 2.64 x 7.8 cm | 5.9 x 2.1 x 0.8 cm | 0.78 x 2 x 6.2 cm | 7.09 x 2.13 x 1.14 cm |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 256 GB | 256 GB | 256 GB | 256 GB | 128 GB |
| Size | 256GB | 256GB | 256GB | 256GB | — |
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| ASIN | B01N7QDO7M |
|---|---|
| Customer Reviews |
4.7 out of 5 stars |
| Best Sellers Rank | 1,446 in Computer & Accessories (See Top 100 in Computer & Accessories) 54 in USB Flash Drives |
| Date First Available | 13 Jan. 2017 |
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4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
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1.0 out of 5 stars
Nach kurzer Zeit LANGSAM und dann DEFEKT!
Reviewed in Germany on 18 June 2018
Kurz gesagt:Habe Ende Mai 2018 den 256GB-Stick bestellt. War nun rund 2 Wochen in Gebrauch. Zuerst (subjektiv betrachtet) langsamer gworden. Nun defekt.Details:Der Stick war zuerst blitzschnell und wurde gefühlsmäßig immer langsamer. Seit heute lässt er sich nicht mehr formatieren oder ähnliches. Wird aber noch erkannt. Die Windows-Computerverwaltung sagt nur "CRC-Fehler" (siehe Bild). Habe versucht, den Stick mit Linux und Mac anzusprechen: nichts!Auch EaseUS Partition Master 12.9 zeigt einen Fehler.Nebenbei zu erwähnen: Die SMART-Werte können von keinem Programm korrekt gelesen werden (z.B. CrystalDiskInfo).Meine Meinung:Irgendetwas hat der Hersteller SanDisk hier "vermurkst". Es könnte an einer fehlerhaften Firmware liegen, denn viele andere Amazon-Kunden schreiben Ähnliches.Ich warte nun auf die Lieferung des Ersatzes und werde ggf. diesen Text hier updaten.UPDATE vom 02.07.2018:Der Stick fängt - meiner Meinung nach - schon wieder an, sich seltsam zu verhalten. Kopiervorgänge geschehen ettapenweise bzw. ruckartig: 80-90MB werden kopiert, dann geht die Datenrate auf ein paar MB/s runter, dann gleich wieder rauf. Diesen wellenartigen Verlauf zeigt auch das Windows-Kopier-Fenster ganz gut. Könnte Windows (v1803) sein dachte ich zuerst...Bei Tests in Windows-PE-Umgebung erreicht der Stick etwa 116 MB/s beim Schreiben (große 50GB-Datei). Selbst mein alter USB3-Stick schafft 80 MB/s und externe Samsung SSD schafft unter gleichen Bedingungen 175 MB/s. Beim nächsten Update werde ich ein Video machen...Meine Vermutung: Der Stick hat Probleme, sobald man das erste Mal mehr als seine volle Kapazität auf ihn geschrieben hat. Vielleciht kann das jemand mal testen....SANDISK Extreme PRO 256GB USB3.1
Reviewed in Germany on 18 June 2018
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Reviewed in Germany on 2 February 2019
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Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
Anfangs wie versprochen ein superschneller Stick, der am USB 3.0 Port beim sequentiellen Lesen auf Datenraten von 380 MB/s kam, beim Schreiben auf 340 MB/s. Bei mäßiger Nutzung brach die Schreibleistung schon nach wenigen Monaten rapide ein. Während die Lesegeschwindigkeit immer noch den Anfangswert erreicht, kommt der Stick nach nunmehr einem halben Jahr beim sequentiellen Schreiben gerade noch auf einen Durchschnittswert von mickrigen 20 MB/s. Das entspricht dem Niveau eines Billigsticks vom Ramschtisch. Von einem Stick dieser Preisklasse erwarte ich deutlich mehr, insbesondere eine erheblich längere Haltbarkeit bei annähernd gleichbleibender Qualität hinsichtlich Lese- UND Schreibgeschwindigkeit. Das Vorgängermodell Sandisk Extreme USB 3.0 zeigt auch nach mehreren Jahren recht intensiven Gebrauchs kaum Leistungseinbußen. Überdies ist ein für USB-Sticks völlig untypisches Verhalten auffallend: Es kommt beim Schreiben nun zu extremen Geschwindigkeitsschwankungen, die vom Kilobytebereich (!) bis zu ca. 70 MB/s reichen.
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Reviewed in Germany on 18 June 2018
Habe Ende Mai 2018 den 256GB-Stick bestellt. War nun rund 2 Wochen in Gebrauch. Zuerst (subjektiv betrachtet) langsamer gworden. Nun defekt.
Details:
Der Stick war zuerst blitzschnell und wurde gefühlsmäßig immer langsamer. Seit heute lässt er sich nicht mehr formatieren oder ähnliches. Wird aber noch erkannt. Die Windows-Computerverwaltung sagt nur "CRC-Fehler" (siehe Bild). Habe versucht, den Stick mit Linux und Mac anzusprechen: nichts!
Auch EaseUS Partition Master 12.9 zeigt einen Fehler.
Nebenbei zu erwähnen: Die SMART-Werte können von keinem Programm korrekt gelesen werden (z.B. CrystalDiskInfo).
Meine Meinung:
Irgendetwas hat der Hersteller SanDisk hier "vermurkst". Es könnte an einer fehlerhaften Firmware liegen, denn viele andere Amazon-Kunden schreiben Ähnliches.
Ich warte nun auf die Lieferung des Ersatzes und werde ggf. diesen Text hier updaten.
UPDATE vom 02.07.2018:
Der Stick fängt - meiner Meinung nach - schon wieder an, sich seltsam zu verhalten. Kopiervorgänge geschehen ettapenweise bzw. ruckartig: 80-90MB werden kopiert, dann geht die Datenrate auf ein paar MB/s runter, dann gleich wieder rauf. Diesen wellenartigen Verlauf zeigt auch das Windows-Kopier-Fenster ganz gut. Könnte Windows (v1803) sein dachte ich zuerst...
Bei Tests in Windows-PE-Umgebung erreicht der Stick etwa 116 MB/s beim Schreiben (große 50GB-Datei). Selbst mein alter USB3-Stick schafft 80 MB/s und externe Samsung SSD schafft unter gleichen Bedingungen 175 MB/s. Beim nächsten Update werde ich ein Video machen...
Meine Vermutung: Der Stick hat Probleme, sobald man das erste Mal mehr als seine volle Kapazität auf ihn geschrieben hat. Vielleciht kann das jemand mal testen....
[[ASIN:B01N7QDO7M SANDISK Extreme PRO 256GB USB3.1]]
Size Name: 256GBStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
Kurz gesagt:
Habe Ende Mai 2018 den 256GB-Stick bestellt. War nun rund 2 Wochen in Gebrauch. Zuerst (subjektiv betrachtet) langsamer gworden. Nun defekt.
Details:
Der Stick war zuerst blitzschnell und wurde gefühlsmäßig immer langsamer. Seit heute lässt er sich nicht mehr formatieren oder ähnliches. Wird aber noch erkannt. Die Windows-Computerverwaltung sagt nur "CRC-Fehler" (siehe Bild). Habe versucht, den Stick mit Linux und Mac anzusprechen: nichts!
Auch EaseUS Partition Master 12.9 zeigt einen Fehler.
Nebenbei zu erwähnen: Die SMART-Werte können von keinem Programm korrekt gelesen werden (z.B. CrystalDiskInfo).
Meine Meinung:
Irgendetwas hat der Hersteller SanDisk hier "vermurkst". Es könnte an einer fehlerhaften Firmware liegen, denn viele andere Amazon-Kunden schreiben Ähnliches.
Ich warte nun auf die Lieferung des Ersatzes und werde ggf. diesen Text hier updaten.
UPDATE vom 02.07.2018:
Der Stick fängt - meiner Meinung nach - schon wieder an, sich seltsam zu verhalten. Kopiervorgänge geschehen ettapenweise bzw. ruckartig: 80-90MB werden kopiert, dann geht die Datenrate auf ein paar MB/s runter, dann gleich wieder rauf. Diesen wellenartigen Verlauf zeigt auch das Windows-Kopier-Fenster ganz gut. Könnte Windows (v1803) sein dachte ich zuerst...
Bei Tests in Windows-PE-Umgebung erreicht der Stick etwa 116 MB/s beim Schreiben (große 50GB-Datei). Selbst mein alter USB3-Stick schafft 80 MB/s und externe Samsung SSD schafft unter gleichen Bedingungen 175 MB/s. Beim nächsten Update werde ich ein Video machen...
Meine Vermutung: Der Stick hat Probleme, sobald man das erste Mal mehr als seine volle Kapazität auf ihn geschrieben hat. Vielleciht kann das jemand mal testen....
SANDISK Extreme PRO 256GB USB3.1
Habe Ende Mai 2018 den 256GB-Stick bestellt. War nun rund 2 Wochen in Gebrauch. Zuerst (subjektiv betrachtet) langsamer gworden. Nun defekt.
Details:
Der Stick war zuerst blitzschnell und wurde gefühlsmäßig immer langsamer. Seit heute lässt er sich nicht mehr formatieren oder ähnliches. Wird aber noch erkannt. Die Windows-Computerverwaltung sagt nur "CRC-Fehler" (siehe Bild). Habe versucht, den Stick mit Linux und Mac anzusprechen: nichts!
Auch EaseUS Partition Master 12.9 zeigt einen Fehler.
Nebenbei zu erwähnen: Die SMART-Werte können von keinem Programm korrekt gelesen werden (z.B. CrystalDiskInfo).
Meine Meinung:
Irgendetwas hat der Hersteller SanDisk hier "vermurkst". Es könnte an einer fehlerhaften Firmware liegen, denn viele andere Amazon-Kunden schreiben Ähnliches.
Ich warte nun auf die Lieferung des Ersatzes und werde ggf. diesen Text hier updaten.
UPDATE vom 02.07.2018:
Der Stick fängt - meiner Meinung nach - schon wieder an, sich seltsam zu verhalten. Kopiervorgänge geschehen ettapenweise bzw. ruckartig: 80-90MB werden kopiert, dann geht die Datenrate auf ein paar MB/s runter, dann gleich wieder rauf. Diesen wellenartigen Verlauf zeigt auch das Windows-Kopier-Fenster ganz gut. Könnte Windows (v1803) sein dachte ich zuerst...
Bei Tests in Windows-PE-Umgebung erreicht der Stick etwa 116 MB/s beim Schreiben (große 50GB-Datei). Selbst mein alter USB3-Stick schafft 80 MB/s und externe Samsung SSD schafft unter gleichen Bedingungen 175 MB/s. Beim nächsten Update werde ich ein Video machen...
Meine Vermutung: Der Stick hat Probleme, sobald man das erste Mal mehr als seine volle Kapazität auf ihn geschrieben hat. Vielleciht kann das jemand mal testen....
SANDISK Extreme PRO 256GB USB3.1
1.0 out of 5 stars
Nach kurzer Zeit LANGSAM und dann DEFEKT!
Reviewed in Germany on 18 June 2018
Kurz gesagt:Reviewed in Germany on 18 June 2018
Habe Ende Mai 2018 den 256GB-Stick bestellt. War nun rund 2 Wochen in Gebrauch. Zuerst (subjektiv betrachtet) langsamer gworden. Nun defekt.
Details:
Der Stick war zuerst blitzschnell und wurde gefühlsmäßig immer langsamer. Seit heute lässt er sich nicht mehr formatieren oder ähnliches. Wird aber noch erkannt. Die Windows-Computerverwaltung sagt nur "CRC-Fehler" (siehe Bild). Habe versucht, den Stick mit Linux und Mac anzusprechen: nichts!
Auch EaseUS Partition Master 12.9 zeigt einen Fehler.
Nebenbei zu erwähnen: Die SMART-Werte können von keinem Programm korrekt gelesen werden (z.B. CrystalDiskInfo).
Meine Meinung:
Irgendetwas hat der Hersteller SanDisk hier "vermurkst". Es könnte an einer fehlerhaften Firmware liegen, denn viele andere Amazon-Kunden schreiben Ähnliches.
Ich warte nun auf die Lieferung des Ersatzes und werde ggf. diesen Text hier updaten.
UPDATE vom 02.07.2018:
Der Stick fängt - meiner Meinung nach - schon wieder an, sich seltsam zu verhalten. Kopiervorgänge geschehen ettapenweise bzw. ruckartig: 80-90MB werden kopiert, dann geht die Datenrate auf ein paar MB/s runter, dann gleich wieder rauf. Diesen wellenartigen Verlauf zeigt auch das Windows-Kopier-Fenster ganz gut. Könnte Windows (v1803) sein dachte ich zuerst...
Bei Tests in Windows-PE-Umgebung erreicht der Stick etwa 116 MB/s beim Schreiben (große 50GB-Datei). Selbst mein alter USB3-Stick schafft 80 MB/s und externe Samsung SSD schafft unter gleichen Bedingungen 175 MB/s. Beim nächsten Update werde ich ein Video machen...
Meine Vermutung: Der Stick hat Probleme, sobald man das erste Mal mehr als seine volle Kapazität auf ihn geschrieben hat. Vielleciht kann das jemand mal testen....
[[ASIN:B01N7QDO7M SANDISK Extreme PRO 256GB USB3.1]]
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Reviewed in Germany on 30 July 2018
Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
Ich habe diesen Stick gewählt, da er laut Tests einen sehr guten Mittelweg mit schneller Schreib- und Lesegeschwindigkeit haben soll, kombiniert mit einer für mich ausreichenden Speicherkapazität.
Leider ist der Stick nach 4 maliger Verwendung unbrauchbar geworden, da er vom Computer nicht mehr erkannt wird.
Ich habe verschiedene Computer mit verschiedenen Betriebssystemen durchprobiert.
Er wird als Festplatte erkannt, aber der Zugriff darauf ist nicht mehr möglich.
Ich werde den Stick daher leider zurück schicken.
Leider ist der Stick nach 4 maliger Verwendung unbrauchbar geworden, da er vom Computer nicht mehr erkannt wird.
Ich habe verschiedene Computer mit verschiedenen Betriebssystemen durchprobiert.
Er wird als Festplatte erkannt, aber der Zugriff darauf ist nicht mehr möglich.
Ich werde den Stick daher leider zurück schicken.
Reviewed in Germany on 25 February 2018
Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
Mein Test: Verzeichnis ~12.000 Dateien (3,4GB) schreiben in <60 sec, lesen 27 sec; eine 3GB-Datei schreiben 9sec, lesen 10 sec. Das sind echte Spitzenwerte. Auch Operationen wie Papierkorb leeren, formatieren etc. gehen rasend schnell.
Es gibt einige wenige andere Sticks, die geschwindigkeitstechnisch offensichtlich mithalten können (Stand 02/2018: z.B. Corsair CMFVYGTX3B-128GB Flash Voyager GTX USB-Stick USB 3.0 , Patriot 256GB Supersonic Magnum 2 USB 3.0 oder HAMA FlashPen "C-Bolt", USB 3.1, Gen. 2, 64 GB (letzterer soll 700MB/s schaffen)). Diese hatte ich nicht in der Hand. Allerdings haben sie alle einen extremen Nachteil: Entweder haben sie keine Öse für den Schlüsselbund und/oder sind sehr breit, so dass andere Anschlüsse (z.B. HDMI) blockiert werden.
Der Extreme Pro ist einen Tick höher als die anderen, dafür recht schmal. Die Öse ist vorhanden und solide (Gehäuse aus Metall). Der Stecker kann über einen Schiebeschalter ein- und ausgefahren werden.
Aus meiner Sicht der beste USB-Stick, den es zurzeit gibt.
ERGÄNZUNG 10.06.2018 - Ich habe den Stick jetzt mehr als 3 Monate in Dauerbetrieb, immer (mit Karabinerhaken) am Schlüsselbund, fast täglich mehrfache Benutzung an unterschiedlichen Rechnern und konnte noch keinen Defekt feststellen, wie in anderen Rezensionen beschrieben.
Es gibt einige wenige andere Sticks, die geschwindigkeitstechnisch offensichtlich mithalten können (Stand 02/2018: z.B. Corsair CMFVYGTX3B-128GB Flash Voyager GTX USB-Stick USB 3.0 , Patriot 256GB Supersonic Magnum 2 USB 3.0 oder HAMA FlashPen "C-Bolt", USB 3.1, Gen. 2, 64 GB (letzterer soll 700MB/s schaffen)). Diese hatte ich nicht in der Hand. Allerdings haben sie alle einen extremen Nachteil: Entweder haben sie keine Öse für den Schlüsselbund und/oder sind sehr breit, so dass andere Anschlüsse (z.B. HDMI) blockiert werden.
Der Extreme Pro ist einen Tick höher als die anderen, dafür recht schmal. Die Öse ist vorhanden und solide (Gehäuse aus Metall). Der Stecker kann über einen Schiebeschalter ein- und ausgefahren werden.
Aus meiner Sicht der beste USB-Stick, den es zurzeit gibt.
ERGÄNZUNG 10.06.2018 - Ich habe den Stick jetzt mehr als 3 Monate in Dauerbetrieb, immer (mit Karabinerhaken) am Schlüsselbund, fast täglich mehrfache Benutzung an unterschiedlichen Rechnern und konnte noch keinen Defekt feststellen, wie in anderen Rezensionen beschrieben.
Reviewed in Germany on 20 October 2018
Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
Hab den Stick 2 mal benutzt und Filme darauf kopiert. Nach dem dritten Mal wurde er von keinem Gerät mehr erkannt.
Der Stick wird binnen kürzester Zeit extrem heiss und je heisser er wird desto mehr geht die Geschwindigkeit beim Schreiben/Lesen runter. Die versprochene Geschwindigkeit konnte ich aber von Anfang an sowieso nicht erreichen. Da war ich Welten von entfernt. Geht zurück.
Der Stick wird binnen kürzester Zeit extrem heiss und je heisser er wird desto mehr geht die Geschwindigkeit beim Schreiben/Lesen runter. Die versprochene Geschwindigkeit konnte ich aber von Anfang an sowieso nicht erreichen. Da war ich Welten von entfernt. Geht zurück.
Reviewed in Germany on 12 February 2018
Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
An sich ein gutes Produkt. Jetzt leider nicht mehr, da er von Windows nicht mehr erkannt wird. Wenigstens hat er lange Garantie, aber bei einem hochwertigen Produkt erwarte ich primär Leistung und Zuverlässigkeit. Ich habe einige ältere Sandisk Sticks, die mir noch immer treue Dienste erweisen, aber leider scheint Sandisk mittlerweile verstärkt Qualtitätsprobleme zu haben...
Edit: Austauschgerät im Rahmen der Garantie angekommen, hat von meiner Mail an den Kundenservice bis zum Erhalt ca. 3 Wochen gedauert.
Edit: Austauschgerät im Rahmen der Garantie angekommen, hat von meiner Mail an den Kundenservice bis zum Erhalt ca. 3 Wochen gedauert.
Top reviews from other countries
Mr Williams
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not a True Solid State Drive, No SMART Data Reading Support, and Fast Write Speeds Won't Last
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 January 2019Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
---------------------
UPDATED REVIEW
---------------------
The first Extreme Pro 128GB 3.1 USB stick I received from Amazon started having write speed problems after I had transferred approximately 200GB to 250GB of data in total to it. I thought the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick I received was faulty so I got Amazon to send me a replacement.
Now the replacement I have received from Amazon is having the exact same problem. Again, like the first stick the problem starts after I have transferred a total of 200GB to 250GB of data to the Extreme Pro 128GB 3.1 USB stick. Just like the first Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick that I received from Amazon, when I first started using this USB stick, I was able to transfer .mkv movie files to the stick at an incredibly steady 180MB/s transfer rate (with write cache disabled in Windows 10). The transfer speed is no longer steady when copying over the same .mkv movie files to the USB stick. The transfer speed is now fluctuating up and down between 20 MB/s to 175 MB/s. CrystalDiskMark is now showing the write speed at 121.6 MB/s when it use to be 240 MB/s. You could use the "SanDisk SSD Dashboard" software and select the "Wipe Media" option to completely erase the USB stick which will temporarily restore the USB stick's steady write performance, but after I transferred 10GB of data to the Extreme Pro USB stick, speeds are now fluctuating again. I also "low-level formatted" the Extreme Pro, but that made little difference.
I have come to the conclusion that the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is missing 2 crucial features, and these 2 missing features are the reason the Extreme Pro 128GB 3.1 USB stick can not maintain its stable fast write speed performance after 200GB to 250GB of data in total writes has been written to it. Here are the 2 most important features that are missing from the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick:
1. TRIM support via UASP (which would of been possible with the Extreme Pro if SanDisk did add UASP support and support for translating the SCSI UNMAP command to ATA TRIM.)
Both the above features (UASP and TRIM - if the Extreme Pro had them) would have greatly helped to maintain the overall long-term speed performance of the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick.
SanDisk were made aware of the speed issues with their previous generation Extreme Pro USB stick and were told it was due to these two missing features (TRIM and UASP). What has SanDisk done about this problem? Absolutely nothing as their current generation Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is still missing these important features. I'm not sure if the above issues can be fixed with a firmware update for the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick. If a SanDisk support staff is reading my review, pass on my suggestion and see if TRIM support and UASP support can be added to the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick via a firmware update. Or if that is not possible, SanDisk should come up with their own proprietary software tool that can send a TRIM like command to the USB stick to completely erase blocks that are storing data for files that the user has already deleted from the USB stick.
All you need to do is have a read through the many 1 star reviews on the Amazon U.S. website and the Amazon(.de) website and you will see that this USB stick will not maintain it's super fast speeds in the weeks and months ahead. Speeds will be fantastic for the first 200GB to 300GB of data you transfer to it in total, but after that the performance of this USB stick begins to suffer because the USB stick does not have UASP and TRIM support.
I have now put in a return and full refund request with Amazon.
--------------------
SECOND UPDATE
--------------------
I have just ordered a Crucial MX500 500GB M.2 type SSD and a Adwits SATA M.2 SSD to USB stick enclosure case to build my own true solid state superfast USB stick (with SMART Data reading support and UASP/TRIM support). The Adwits USB stick enclosure case does not support TRIM with the default firmware. You will need to use the following tool ASM105xMPTool.exe (Google it) and use it to update the Adwits USB stick enclosure to firmware version 140509_A1_82_40.bin (Google it) and then TRIM will work via the USB Port. This is the Adwits USB stick enclosure case I have bought and it works perfectly with my Crucial MX500 SATA M.2 SSD: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Adwits-SuperSpeed-Cordless-External-Enclosure-SATA-M-2-SSD-USB-3-0-Case-Compact/dp/B0787FWVHP/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?ie=UTF8&qid=1550852681&sr=8-1-spons&keywords=adwits+usb+3.0+uasp&psc=1
MY ORIGINAL REVIEW IS BELOW (WHEN THE REPLACEMENT USB STICK WAS WORKING PERFECTLY)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Not a True Solid State Drive and No SMART Data Reading Support
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is not a true solid state drive, but is a USB 3.1 flash drive stick that performs like a solid state drive. The company SanDisk only supports SMART data reading on their solid state drives, and since the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is not a true solid state drive, it does not support SMART data reading with softwares such as CrystalDiskInfo, HWiNFO64, etc. Even though the USB stick's previous firmware version 6EA 1010 use to report SMART data readings, these readings would not have been accurate as SMART data reading is not a supported feature on the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick. If you try to read the USB stick's SMART data values with its latest firmware (version 6EB 1030), you will get incorrect SMART data values. The USB's temperature will be reported as 8°C and the USB stick's health status will be report as Bad 0%. No SMART data reading support is making people think their SanDisk Extreme Pro USB stick is dying, when in fact there is nothing wrong with their SanDisk Extreme Pro USB stick.
--------------------------
Quality Control Issues
--------------------------
The retractor switch on top of the USB stick to extend its USB connector after some usage would not click in place to stop the USB stick connector from retracting when the USB stick is plugged into a USB port. I eventually managed to fix this problem by pushing the retractor switch forward HARD and then retracting it at least 7 times and now when I use the retractor switch on top of the USB to extend its USB connector the USB connector is now staying extended like it should. So I have managed to fix that problem.
-----------------------------------------------
Default Formatting by the Manufacturer
-----------------------------------------------
By default, the SanDisk Extreme pro 3.1 128GB USB stick comes formatted as exFAT (which is a optimized file system for flash drives) with an allocation unit size of 512 Kilobytes (so if you transfer folders that contain lots of small files these small files will use up much more storage space on the USB stick). You can do a quick format on the USB stick and choose a much smaller exFAT allocation unit size (for example 16K) so that folders that contain lots of small files will take up much less storage space when transferred to the USB stick.
If you are a Windows operating system user the default exFAT file system means you will not be able to set user access permissions for the files and folders you store on the USB stick. You can easily fix this issue by reformatting the USB stick to NTFS, but I do not recommended you do this as NTFS will add extra wear and tear overhead due to its journaling file system and will shorten the lifespan of the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick. The USB stick also has a 16 MB unallocated partition at the front of the drive.
Personally, I have put 2 separate partitions on the Extreme Pro USB stick. FAT32 (so that the USB stick works in my 4k TV) and exFAT (to use with my PC and laptop), and I used the software "DiskGenius" to do this.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Positive Things About the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB Stick
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
POSITIVE POINT 1. The SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick comes with a 30 years warranty. If the USB stick develops a fault and is not functioning as it should, and troubleshooting the USB stick does not fix the problems you are experiencing with the USB stick, SanDisk will replace your SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick with a brand new one.
POSITIVE POINT 2. The USB stick maintains a high level of write performance after continual use (I have copied at least 150GB of data to the USB stick so far, and have done multiple quick formats, a complete data wipe, created a MBR partition table, and partitioned the USB stick a few times, and so far the USB stick has shown no signs of wear and tear as write speeds are still incredibly fast and consistent (176 to 180 MB/s without Windows cache, and 176 to 250 MB/s with Windows cache activated (exactly the same speeds when I first started using the USB stick). When Windows cache is disabled there is almost no fluctuations in write speed. Large files (.exe, .iso, .mkv, .mp4, .zip, .rar, etc.) transfer at a very consistent rate of 176 to 180 MB/s.
POSITIVE POINT 3. Another great thing about this USB stick is that it is using a MLC NAND chip and not a TLC NAND chip (SanDisk would not say whether the USB stick uses a 2D MLC NAND chip or 3D MLC NAND chip, and there is no way of verifying whether the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is really using a MLC NAND as SanDisk has gone to great lengths to make sure that the type of NAND it uses is not reported in softwares such as "ChipGenius" and "USBDriveInfo". So you will just have to take SanDisk's word that the USB stick is using a MLC NAND chip. The write cycle endurance threshold for this USB stick could possibly be anywhere from 3000 to 10000).
-------------------
Negative Points
-------------------
NEGATIVE POINT 1. The USB stick has a slippery aluminium metal casing and because of this the USB stick can easily slip out of your hands (I have dropped the USB stick once due to this).
NEGATIVE POINT 2. SanDisk are to secretive about additional specs for this USB stick that are important for a customer to know. SanDisk support will not say what the max write cycle is for this USB stick or give an estimation of the max terabytes that can be written to the USB stick over its lifetime. Also, SanDisk support would not tell me what kind of MLC NAND chip the USB stick has. I asked them if it was using a 2D MLC NAND chip or a 3D MLC NAND chip, but they would not disclose this information. I wanted to know because then I would know what the approximate max write cycles are for this USB stick which is important if I am going to be storing my valuable data on it.
NEGATIVE POINT 3. Again SanDisk being far too secretive about the USB stick's additional specs. SanDisk support will not state what is the max terabytes that can be written to the drive over its lifetime and will not provide other important additional technical details (such as what is the Extreme Pro's Erase Sector size?).
NEGATIVE POINT 4. No "Looking After Your Solid State Flash Drive USB Stick" user guide is included in the packaging box. SanDisk should include a user's guide in the packaging box that provides tips on how to look after the USB stick. A user guide with a list of do's and don'ts such as to never do a full format on the USB stick and to never do a full drive encryption on the USB stick will stop individuals from doing things that have a severe negative impact on the USB stick's write performance and lifespan.
NEGATIVE POINT 5. The SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick has no UASP or TRIM support to help maintain the overall long-term speed performance of the USB stick. After you have written data to the USB stick that is 2 to 3 times it capacity (when all free blocks have been written to), expect the fast write speeds of the USB stick to drop considerably when copying large files (.exe, .iso, .mkv, .mp4, .zip, .rar, etc.). You can somewhat restore the USB stick's performance by using a software named "DiskGenius" to do a "Erase Free Space" on the USB stick, or you will need to do a "Secure Erase" on the USB stick using the SanDisk SSD Dashboard software (UPDATE: I do not think Secure Erase works on this USB stick. The "Secure Erase" procedure completes, but my files are still showing on the USB stick when I view it's HEX code). If you can manage to get "Secure Erase" to work, then it will restore the USB stick to peak performance. Also, if you use SanDisk's RescuePro Deluxe software to permanently "Wipe Media" from the USB stick, you will need to use the software "Rufus" to create a MBR partition table (in the software Rufus select the "NON-BOOTABLE" partition scheme) and to do a "quick format", otherwise you will experience problems when trying to add a partition at the front of the Extreme Pro flash drive.
NEGATIVE POINT 6. No SMART data reading support, which leads people to think their SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is dying when they view its SMART data stats with softwares such as CrystalDiskInfo, HWiNFO64, etc., when in fact there is nothing wrong with their SanDisk Extreme Pro USB stick. Future SanDisk high-end USB sticks such as the Extreme Pro need to support smart data reading. As doing so will cut down on the number of people returning their USB stick for a refund or submitting it for a RMA with SanDisk due to them thinking the USB stick is faulty.
NEGATIVE POINT 7. HEAT issues under certain use cases. For example, if I plug the USB stick in the back of my PS4 Pro for 10 minutes (the PS4 Pro is switched on and in use), when I remove the USB stick it is not warm, but very hot. This could be due to the fact the PS4 Pro disperses heat at the back of the console. Once I removed the USB stick from the back of my PS4 Pro, it cooled down within a few minutes. Using the Extreme Pro USB stick in my PC to copy gigabytes of files to it only results in the USB getting warm, not hot, but that can be because the back of my PC (where the USB stick is) has a PSU fan that is dispersing cool air.
UPDATED REVIEW
---------------------
The first Extreme Pro 128GB 3.1 USB stick I received from Amazon started having write speed problems after I had transferred approximately 200GB to 250GB of data in total to it. I thought the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick I received was faulty so I got Amazon to send me a replacement.
Now the replacement I have received from Amazon is having the exact same problem. Again, like the first stick the problem starts after I have transferred a total of 200GB to 250GB of data to the Extreme Pro 128GB 3.1 USB stick. Just like the first Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick that I received from Amazon, when I first started using this USB stick, I was able to transfer .mkv movie files to the stick at an incredibly steady 180MB/s transfer rate (with write cache disabled in Windows 10). The transfer speed is no longer steady when copying over the same .mkv movie files to the USB stick. The transfer speed is now fluctuating up and down between 20 MB/s to 175 MB/s. CrystalDiskMark is now showing the write speed at 121.6 MB/s when it use to be 240 MB/s. You could use the "SanDisk SSD Dashboard" software and select the "Wipe Media" option to completely erase the USB stick which will temporarily restore the USB stick's steady write performance, but after I transferred 10GB of data to the Extreme Pro USB stick, speeds are now fluctuating again. I also "low-level formatted" the Extreme Pro, but that made little difference.
I have come to the conclusion that the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is missing 2 crucial features, and these 2 missing features are the reason the Extreme Pro 128GB 3.1 USB stick can not maintain its stable fast write speed performance after 200GB to 250GB of data in total writes has been written to it. Here are the 2 most important features that are missing from the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick:
1. TRIM support via UASP (which would of been possible with the Extreme Pro if SanDisk did add UASP support and support for translating the SCSI UNMAP command to ATA TRIM.)
Both the above features (UASP and TRIM - if the Extreme Pro had them) would have greatly helped to maintain the overall long-term speed performance of the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick.
SanDisk were made aware of the speed issues with their previous generation Extreme Pro USB stick and were told it was due to these two missing features (TRIM and UASP). What has SanDisk done about this problem? Absolutely nothing as their current generation Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is still missing these important features. I'm not sure if the above issues can be fixed with a firmware update for the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick. If a SanDisk support staff is reading my review, pass on my suggestion and see if TRIM support and UASP support can be added to the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick via a firmware update. Or if that is not possible, SanDisk should come up with their own proprietary software tool that can send a TRIM like command to the USB stick to completely erase blocks that are storing data for files that the user has already deleted from the USB stick.
All you need to do is have a read through the many 1 star reviews on the Amazon U.S. website and the Amazon(.de) website and you will see that this USB stick will not maintain it's super fast speeds in the weeks and months ahead. Speeds will be fantastic for the first 200GB to 300GB of data you transfer to it in total, but after that the performance of this USB stick begins to suffer because the USB stick does not have UASP and TRIM support.
I have now put in a return and full refund request with Amazon.
--------------------
SECOND UPDATE
--------------------
I have just ordered a Crucial MX500 500GB M.2 type SSD and a Adwits SATA M.2 SSD to USB stick enclosure case to build my own true solid state superfast USB stick (with SMART Data reading support and UASP/TRIM support). The Adwits USB stick enclosure case does not support TRIM with the default firmware. You will need to use the following tool ASM105xMPTool.exe (Google it) and use it to update the Adwits USB stick enclosure to firmware version 140509_A1_82_40.bin (Google it) and then TRIM will work via the USB Port. This is the Adwits USB stick enclosure case I have bought and it works perfectly with my Crucial MX500 SATA M.2 SSD: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Adwits-SuperSpeed-Cordless-External-Enclosure-SATA-M-2-SSD-USB-3-0-Case-Compact/dp/B0787FWVHP/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?ie=UTF8&qid=1550852681&sr=8-1-spons&keywords=adwits+usb+3.0+uasp&psc=1
MY ORIGINAL REVIEW IS BELOW (WHEN THE REPLACEMENT USB STICK WAS WORKING PERFECTLY)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Not a True Solid State Drive and No SMART Data Reading Support
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is not a true solid state drive, but is a USB 3.1 flash drive stick that performs like a solid state drive. The company SanDisk only supports SMART data reading on their solid state drives, and since the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is not a true solid state drive, it does not support SMART data reading with softwares such as CrystalDiskInfo, HWiNFO64, etc. Even though the USB stick's previous firmware version 6EA 1010 use to report SMART data readings, these readings would not have been accurate as SMART data reading is not a supported feature on the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick. If you try to read the USB stick's SMART data values with its latest firmware (version 6EB 1030), you will get incorrect SMART data values. The USB's temperature will be reported as 8°C and the USB stick's health status will be report as Bad 0%. No SMART data reading support is making people think their SanDisk Extreme Pro USB stick is dying, when in fact there is nothing wrong with their SanDisk Extreme Pro USB stick.
--------------------------
Quality Control Issues
--------------------------
The retractor switch on top of the USB stick to extend its USB connector after some usage would not click in place to stop the USB stick connector from retracting when the USB stick is plugged into a USB port. I eventually managed to fix this problem by pushing the retractor switch forward HARD and then retracting it at least 7 times and now when I use the retractor switch on top of the USB to extend its USB connector the USB connector is now staying extended like it should. So I have managed to fix that problem.
-----------------------------------------------
Default Formatting by the Manufacturer
-----------------------------------------------
By default, the SanDisk Extreme pro 3.1 128GB USB stick comes formatted as exFAT (which is a optimized file system for flash drives) with an allocation unit size of 512 Kilobytes (so if you transfer folders that contain lots of small files these small files will use up much more storage space on the USB stick). You can do a quick format on the USB stick and choose a much smaller exFAT allocation unit size (for example 16K) so that folders that contain lots of small files will take up much less storage space when transferred to the USB stick.
If you are a Windows operating system user the default exFAT file system means you will not be able to set user access permissions for the files and folders you store on the USB stick. You can easily fix this issue by reformatting the USB stick to NTFS, but I do not recommended you do this as NTFS will add extra wear and tear overhead due to its journaling file system and will shorten the lifespan of the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick. The USB stick also has a 16 MB unallocated partition at the front of the drive.
Personally, I have put 2 separate partitions on the Extreme Pro USB stick. FAT32 (so that the USB stick works in my 4k TV) and exFAT (to use with my PC and laptop), and I used the software "DiskGenius" to do this.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Positive Things About the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB Stick
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
POSITIVE POINT 1. The SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick comes with a 30 years warranty. If the USB stick develops a fault and is not functioning as it should, and troubleshooting the USB stick does not fix the problems you are experiencing with the USB stick, SanDisk will replace your SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick with a brand new one.
POSITIVE POINT 2. The USB stick maintains a high level of write performance after continual use (I have copied at least 150GB of data to the USB stick so far, and have done multiple quick formats, a complete data wipe, created a MBR partition table, and partitioned the USB stick a few times, and so far the USB stick has shown no signs of wear and tear as write speeds are still incredibly fast and consistent (176 to 180 MB/s without Windows cache, and 176 to 250 MB/s with Windows cache activated (exactly the same speeds when I first started using the USB stick). When Windows cache is disabled there is almost no fluctuations in write speed. Large files (.exe, .iso, .mkv, .mp4, .zip, .rar, etc.) transfer at a very consistent rate of 176 to 180 MB/s.
POSITIVE POINT 3. Another great thing about this USB stick is that it is using a MLC NAND chip and not a TLC NAND chip (SanDisk would not say whether the USB stick uses a 2D MLC NAND chip or 3D MLC NAND chip, and there is no way of verifying whether the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is really using a MLC NAND as SanDisk has gone to great lengths to make sure that the type of NAND it uses is not reported in softwares such as "ChipGenius" and "USBDriveInfo". So you will just have to take SanDisk's word that the USB stick is using a MLC NAND chip. The write cycle endurance threshold for this USB stick could possibly be anywhere from 3000 to 10000).
-------------------
Negative Points
-------------------
NEGATIVE POINT 1. The USB stick has a slippery aluminium metal casing and because of this the USB stick can easily slip out of your hands (I have dropped the USB stick once due to this).
NEGATIVE POINT 2. SanDisk are to secretive about additional specs for this USB stick that are important for a customer to know. SanDisk support will not say what the max write cycle is for this USB stick or give an estimation of the max terabytes that can be written to the USB stick over its lifetime. Also, SanDisk support would not tell me what kind of MLC NAND chip the USB stick has. I asked them if it was using a 2D MLC NAND chip or a 3D MLC NAND chip, but they would not disclose this information. I wanted to know because then I would know what the approximate max write cycles are for this USB stick which is important if I am going to be storing my valuable data on it.
NEGATIVE POINT 3. Again SanDisk being far too secretive about the USB stick's additional specs. SanDisk support will not state what is the max terabytes that can be written to the drive over its lifetime and will not provide other important additional technical details (such as what is the Extreme Pro's Erase Sector size?).
NEGATIVE POINT 4. No "Looking After Your Solid State Flash Drive USB Stick" user guide is included in the packaging box. SanDisk should include a user's guide in the packaging box that provides tips on how to look after the USB stick. A user guide with a list of do's and don'ts such as to never do a full format on the USB stick and to never do a full drive encryption on the USB stick will stop individuals from doing things that have a severe negative impact on the USB stick's write performance and lifespan.
NEGATIVE POINT 5. The SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick has no UASP or TRIM support to help maintain the overall long-term speed performance of the USB stick. After you have written data to the USB stick that is 2 to 3 times it capacity (when all free blocks have been written to), expect the fast write speeds of the USB stick to drop considerably when copying large files (.exe, .iso, .mkv, .mp4, .zip, .rar, etc.). You can somewhat restore the USB stick's performance by using a software named "DiskGenius" to do a "Erase Free Space" on the USB stick, or you will need to do a "Secure Erase" on the USB stick using the SanDisk SSD Dashboard software (UPDATE: I do not think Secure Erase works on this USB stick. The "Secure Erase" procedure completes, but my files are still showing on the USB stick when I view it's HEX code). If you can manage to get "Secure Erase" to work, then it will restore the USB stick to peak performance. Also, if you use SanDisk's RescuePro Deluxe software to permanently "Wipe Media" from the USB stick, you will need to use the software "Rufus" to create a MBR partition table (in the software Rufus select the "NON-BOOTABLE" partition scheme) and to do a "quick format", otherwise you will experience problems when trying to add a partition at the front of the Extreme Pro flash drive.
NEGATIVE POINT 6. No SMART data reading support, which leads people to think their SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is dying when they view its SMART data stats with softwares such as CrystalDiskInfo, HWiNFO64, etc., when in fact there is nothing wrong with their SanDisk Extreme Pro USB stick. Future SanDisk high-end USB sticks such as the Extreme Pro need to support smart data reading. As doing so will cut down on the number of people returning their USB stick for a refund or submitting it for a RMA with SanDisk due to them thinking the USB stick is faulty.
NEGATIVE POINT 7. HEAT issues under certain use cases. For example, if I plug the USB stick in the back of my PS4 Pro for 10 minutes (the PS4 Pro is switched on and in use), when I remove the USB stick it is not warm, but very hot. This could be due to the fact the PS4 Pro disperses heat at the back of the console. Once I removed the USB stick from the back of my PS4 Pro, it cooled down within a few minutes. Using the Extreme Pro USB stick in my PC to copy gigabytes of files to it only results in the USB getting warm, not hot, but that can be because the back of my PC (where the USB stick is) has a PSU fan that is dispersing cool air.
Mr Williams
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 January 2019
UPDATED REVIEW
---------------------
The first Extreme Pro 128GB 3.1 USB stick I received from Amazon started having write speed problems after I had transferred approximately 200GB to 250GB of data in total to it. I thought the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick I received was faulty so I got Amazon to send me a replacement.
Now the replacement I have received from Amazon is having the exact same problem. Again, like the first stick the problem starts after I have transferred a total of 200GB to 250GB of data to the Extreme Pro 128GB 3.1 USB stick. Just like the first Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick that I received from Amazon, when I first started using this USB stick, I was able to transfer .mkv movie files to the stick at an incredibly steady 180MB/s transfer rate (with write cache disabled in Windows 10). The transfer speed is no longer steady when copying over the same .mkv movie files to the USB stick. The transfer speed is now fluctuating up and down between 20 MB/s to 175 MB/s. CrystalDiskMark is now showing the write speed at 121.6 MB/s when it use to be 240 MB/s. You could use the "SanDisk SSD Dashboard" software and select the "Wipe Media" option to completely erase the USB stick which will temporarily restore the USB stick's steady write performance, but after I transferred 10GB of data to the Extreme Pro USB stick, speeds are now fluctuating again. I also "low-level formatted" the Extreme Pro, but that made little difference.
I have come to the conclusion that the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is missing 2 crucial features, and these 2 missing features are the reason the Extreme Pro 128GB 3.1 USB stick can not maintain its stable fast write speed performance after 200GB to 250GB of data in total writes has been written to it. Here are the 2 most important features that are missing from the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick:
1. TRIM support via UASP (which would of been possible with the Extreme Pro if SanDisk did add UASP support and support for translating the SCSI UNMAP command to ATA TRIM.)
Both the above features (UASP and TRIM - if the Extreme Pro had them) would have greatly helped to maintain the overall long-term speed performance of the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick.
SanDisk were made aware of the speed issues with their previous generation Extreme Pro USB stick and were told it was due to these two missing features (TRIM and UASP). What has SanDisk done about this problem? Absolutely nothing as their current generation Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is still missing these important features. I'm not sure if the above issues can be fixed with a firmware update for the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick. If a SanDisk support staff is reading my review, pass on my suggestion and see if TRIM support and UASP support can be added to the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick via a firmware update. Or if that is not possible, SanDisk should come up with their own proprietary software tool that can send a TRIM like command to the USB stick to completely erase blocks that are storing data for files that the user has already deleted from the USB stick.
All you need to do is have a read through the many 1 star reviews on the Amazon U.S. website and the Amazon(.de) website and you will see that this USB stick will not maintain it's super fast speeds in the weeks and months ahead. Speeds will be fantastic for the first 200GB to 300GB of data you transfer to it in total, but after that the performance of this USB stick begins to suffer because the USB stick does not have UASP and TRIM support.
I have now put in a return and full refund request with Amazon.
--------------------
SECOND UPDATE
--------------------
I have just ordered a Crucial MX500 500GB M.2 type SSD and a Adwits SATA M.2 SSD to USB stick enclosure case to build my own true solid state superfast USB stick (with SMART Data reading support and UASP/TRIM support). The Adwits USB stick enclosure case does not support TRIM with the default firmware. You will need to use the following tool ASM105xMPTool.exe (Google it) and use it to update the Adwits USB stick enclosure to firmware version 140509_A1_82_40.bin (Google it) and then TRIM will work via the USB Port. This is the Adwits USB stick enclosure case I have bought and it works perfectly with my Crucial MX500 SATA M.2 SSD: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Adwits-SuperSpeed-Cordless-External-Enclosure-SATA-M-2-SSD-USB-3-0-Case-Compact/dp/B0787FWVHP/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?ie=UTF8&qid=1550852681&sr=8-1-spons&keywords=adwits+usb+3.0+uasp&psc=1
MY ORIGINAL REVIEW IS BELOW (WHEN THE REPLACEMENT USB STICK WAS WORKING PERFECTLY)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Not a True Solid State Drive and No SMART Data Reading Support
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is not a true solid state drive, but is a USB 3.1 flash drive stick that performs like a solid state drive. The company SanDisk only supports SMART data reading on their solid state drives, and since the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is not a true solid state drive, it does not support SMART data reading with softwares such as CrystalDiskInfo, HWiNFO64, etc. Even though the USB stick's previous firmware version 6EA 1010 use to report SMART data readings, these readings would not have been accurate as SMART data reading is not a supported feature on the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick. If you try to read the USB stick's SMART data values with its latest firmware (version 6EB 1030), you will get incorrect SMART data values. The USB's temperature will be reported as 8°C and the USB stick's health status will be report as Bad 0%. No SMART data reading support is making people think their SanDisk Extreme Pro USB stick is dying, when in fact there is nothing wrong with their SanDisk Extreme Pro USB stick.
--------------------------
Quality Control Issues
--------------------------
The retractor switch on top of the USB stick to extend its USB connector after some usage would not click in place to stop the USB stick connector from retracting when the USB stick is plugged into a USB port. I eventually managed to fix this problem by pushing the retractor switch forward HARD and then retracting it at least 7 times and now when I use the retractor switch on top of the USB to extend its USB connector the USB connector is now staying extended like it should. So I have managed to fix that problem.
-----------------------------------------------
Default Formatting by the Manufacturer
-----------------------------------------------
By default, the SanDisk Extreme pro 3.1 128GB USB stick comes formatted as exFAT (which is a optimized file system for flash drives) with an allocation unit size of 512 Kilobytes (so if you transfer folders that contain lots of small files these small files will use up much more storage space on the USB stick). You can do a quick format on the USB stick and choose a much smaller exFAT allocation unit size (for example 16K) so that folders that contain lots of small files will take up much less storage space when transferred to the USB stick.
If you are a Windows operating system user the default exFAT file system means you will not be able to set user access permissions for the files and folders you store on the USB stick. You can easily fix this issue by reformatting the USB stick to NTFS, but I do not recommended you do this as NTFS will add extra wear and tear overhead due to its journaling file system and will shorten the lifespan of the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick. The USB stick also has a 16 MB unallocated partition at the front of the drive.
Personally, I have put 2 separate partitions on the Extreme Pro USB stick. FAT32 (so that the USB stick works in my 4k TV) and exFAT (to use with my PC and laptop), and I used the software "DiskGenius" to do this.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Positive Things About the SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB Stick
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
POSITIVE POINT 1. The SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick comes with a 30 years warranty. If the USB stick develops a fault and is not functioning as it should, and troubleshooting the USB stick does not fix the problems you are experiencing with the USB stick, SanDisk will replace your SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick with a brand new one.
POSITIVE POINT 2. The USB stick maintains a high level of write performance after continual use (I have copied at least 150GB of data to the USB stick so far, and have done multiple quick formats, a complete data wipe, created a MBR partition table, and partitioned the USB stick a few times, and so far the USB stick has shown no signs of wear and tear as write speeds are still incredibly fast and consistent (176 to 180 MB/s without Windows cache, and 176 to 250 MB/s with Windows cache activated (exactly the same speeds when I first started using the USB stick). When Windows cache is disabled there is almost no fluctuations in write speed. Large files (.exe, .iso, .mkv, .mp4, .zip, .rar, etc.) transfer at a very consistent rate of 176 to 180 MB/s.
POSITIVE POINT 3. Another great thing about this USB stick is that it is using a MLC NAND chip and not a TLC NAND chip (SanDisk would not say whether the USB stick uses a 2D MLC NAND chip or 3D MLC NAND chip, and there is no way of verifying whether the Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is really using a MLC NAND as SanDisk has gone to great lengths to make sure that the type of NAND it uses is not reported in softwares such as "ChipGenius" and "USBDriveInfo". So you will just have to take SanDisk's word that the USB stick is using a MLC NAND chip. The write cycle endurance threshold for this USB stick could possibly be anywhere from 3000 to 10000).
-------------------
Negative Points
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NEGATIVE POINT 1. The USB stick has a slippery aluminium metal casing and because of this the USB stick can easily slip out of your hands (I have dropped the USB stick once due to this).
NEGATIVE POINT 2. SanDisk are to secretive about additional specs for this USB stick that are important for a customer to know. SanDisk support will not say what the max write cycle is for this USB stick or give an estimation of the max terabytes that can be written to the USB stick over its lifetime. Also, SanDisk support would not tell me what kind of MLC NAND chip the USB stick has. I asked them if it was using a 2D MLC NAND chip or a 3D MLC NAND chip, but they would not disclose this information. I wanted to know because then I would know what the approximate max write cycles are for this USB stick which is important if I am going to be storing my valuable data on it.
NEGATIVE POINT 3. Again SanDisk being far too secretive about the USB stick's additional specs. SanDisk support will not state what is the max terabytes that can be written to the drive over its lifetime and will not provide other important additional technical details (such as what is the Extreme Pro's Erase Sector size?).
NEGATIVE POINT 4. No "Looking After Your Solid State Flash Drive USB Stick" user guide is included in the packaging box. SanDisk should include a user's guide in the packaging box that provides tips on how to look after the USB stick. A user guide with a list of do's and don'ts such as to never do a full format on the USB stick and to never do a full drive encryption on the USB stick will stop individuals from doing things that have a severe negative impact on the USB stick's write performance and lifespan.
NEGATIVE POINT 5. The SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick has no UASP or TRIM support to help maintain the overall long-term speed performance of the USB stick. After you have written data to the USB stick that is 2 to 3 times it capacity (when all free blocks have been written to), expect the fast write speeds of the USB stick to drop considerably when copying large files (.exe, .iso, .mkv, .mp4, .zip, .rar, etc.). You can somewhat restore the USB stick's performance by using a software named "DiskGenius" to do a "Erase Free Space" on the USB stick, or you will need to do a "Secure Erase" on the USB stick using the SanDisk SSD Dashboard software (UPDATE: I do not think Secure Erase works on this USB stick. The "Secure Erase" procedure completes, but my files are still showing on the USB stick when I view it's HEX code). If you can manage to get "Secure Erase" to work, then it will restore the USB stick to peak performance. Also, if you use SanDisk's RescuePro Deluxe software to permanently "Wipe Media" from the USB stick, you will need to use the software "Rufus" to create a MBR partition table (in the software Rufus select the "NON-BOOTABLE" partition scheme) and to do a "quick format", otherwise you will experience problems when trying to add a partition at the front of the Extreme Pro flash drive.
NEGATIVE POINT 6. No SMART data reading support, which leads people to think their SanDisk Extreme Pro 3.1 USB stick is dying when they view its SMART data stats with softwares such as CrystalDiskInfo, HWiNFO64, etc., when in fact there is nothing wrong with their SanDisk Extreme Pro USB stick. Future SanDisk high-end USB sticks such as the Extreme Pro need to support smart data reading. As doing so will cut down on the number of people returning their USB stick for a refund or submitting it for a RMA with SanDisk due to them thinking the USB stick is faulty.
NEGATIVE POINT 7. HEAT issues under certain use cases. For example, if I plug the USB stick in the back of my PS4 Pro for 10 minutes (the PS4 Pro is switched on and in use), when I remove the USB stick it is not warm, but very hot. This could be due to the fact the PS4 Pro disperses heat at the back of the console. Once I removed the USB stick from the back of my PS4 Pro, it cooled down within a few minutes. Using the Extreme Pro USB stick in my PC to copy gigabytes of files to it only results in the USB getting warm, not hot, but that can be because the back of my PC (where the USB stick is) has a PSU fan that is dispersing cool air.
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Philippe Lazarevitch
1.0 out of 5 stars
Cette clé USB chauffe en plus en plus à un point où les données ne sont plus accessibles.
Reviewed in France on 7 August 2019Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
Paris le 7 août 2019
Cette clé USB SanDisk 3.1 SSD Externe Pro 128 Go surchauffe. Je finissais pas la débrancher une fois terminés mes transferts, par précaution. Mais cela n'a pas suffit. Elle a pourtant moins d'une année ! Elle finit complètement bloquée : je n'arrive même plus à l'étape du code. Et mes données contenues sont maintenant inaccessibles, perdues !
Maintenant, je ne vois pas d'autre solutions que de vous la retourner et voir un autre stockage.
Cordialement,
Ph Lazarevitch
13h
Je viens de connecter la clé USB afin de revoir son état. Je ne l'avais pas touché depuis plusieurs jours ! Et surprise : j'accède à mes données normalement sans qu'elle chauffe excessivement....mais pas pour longtemps ! Au bout de quelques minutes, c'est le blanc : un message s'affiche : "le programme ne répond pas".
En somme : cela semble pour le moins irrégulier !
Je tenais à vous le signaler
Cordialement,
Ph Lazarevitch
Vendredi 9 août 2019
Cette clé USB SanDisk est garantie 5 ans (bien que cela ne figure plus sur le portail) et je l'ai acheté il y a moins en septembre 2018 soit il y a moins d'1 an !
Et pour la retourner, ne serait-ce que dans l'espoir de la voir réparée...c'est pire que le parcours du combattant ! Pourtant, l'an passé, Amazon affichait bien "Garantie fabricant : 5 ans" ... que j'ai dument imprimé ! Mais pour ce qu'il en résulte....reste à voir le service client !
Finalement : je n'ai trouvé comment retourner cet article pourtant garantie 5 ans, ni joindre le service client !
Cette clé USB SanDisk 3.1 SSD Externe Pro 128 Go surchauffe. Je finissais pas la débrancher une fois terminés mes transferts, par précaution. Mais cela n'a pas suffit. Elle a pourtant moins d'une année ! Elle finit complètement bloquée : je n'arrive même plus à l'étape du code. Et mes données contenues sont maintenant inaccessibles, perdues !
Maintenant, je ne vois pas d'autre solutions que de vous la retourner et voir un autre stockage.
Cordialement,
Ph Lazarevitch
13h
Je viens de connecter la clé USB afin de revoir son état. Je ne l'avais pas touché depuis plusieurs jours ! Et surprise : j'accède à mes données normalement sans qu'elle chauffe excessivement....mais pas pour longtemps ! Au bout de quelques minutes, c'est le blanc : un message s'affiche : "le programme ne répond pas".
En somme : cela semble pour le moins irrégulier !
Je tenais à vous le signaler
Cordialement,
Ph Lazarevitch
Vendredi 9 août 2019
Cette clé USB SanDisk est garantie 5 ans (bien que cela ne figure plus sur le portail) et je l'ai acheté il y a moins en septembre 2018 soit il y a moins d'1 an !
Et pour la retourner, ne serait-ce que dans l'espoir de la voir réparée...c'est pire que le parcours du combattant ! Pourtant, l'an passé, Amazon affichait bien "Garantie fabricant : 5 ans" ... que j'ai dument imprimé ! Mais pour ce qu'il en résulte....reste à voir le service client !
Finalement : je n'ai trouvé comment retourner cet article pourtant garantie 5 ans, ni joindre le service client !
Mario Pacchiarotti
5.0 out of 5 stars
Impressioni d'uso e risultati dei miei test, alcune cose che dovreste sapere prima di comprare una USB di questa portata
Reviewed in Italy on 23 November 2017Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
Breve ma doverosa premessa. Non sono un utilizzatore normale di chiavette USB. Ne uso moltissime, per motivi diversi e mi occorrono strumenti con caratteristiche diverse. Posso dire di aver più o meno testato una bella fetta di ciò che nel tempo è uscito sul mercato. Questa particolare chiavetta l'ho comprata per utilizzarla come backup per i miei dati di lavoro e ufficio. Una caratteristica mandatoria era che non mi facesse quindi perdere molto tempo durante i backup, che svolgo ogni pomeriggio prima di uscire dal lavoro e ogni sera prima di andare a letto (quando uso il pc a casa). Dovendo fare il backup di numerosissimi file, per lo più di dimensioni piccole (da pochi bytes a qualche mega), i dati di performance che di solito dichiarano i costruttori hanno poco senso. A me interessa prevalentemente il dato di scrittura di blocchi da 4K, quello che determina la differenza tra un backup di un'ora e quello di un minuto. Passiamo alla recensione.
<b>Aspetti estetici e materiali</b>
La chiavetta arriva in una confezione tradizionale di cartone e plastica, con i soliti dati che potete trovare anche online su velocità e caratteristiche del prodotto. Si tratta di una chiavetta che ricorda i vecchi prodotti, per le dimensioni piuttosto generose. Il meccanismo è a slitta, dunque non ci sono tappini da perdere. C'è da sperare che il blocco che entra in azione non faccia la solita fine, allentandosi e rendendo quindi l'uso disagevole, specialmente inserimento. Per ora nessun problema, ma sono passati pochi giorni.
Il corpo centrale è in plastica, protetto da una specie di guscio esterno in metallo, tranne per la slitta che è libera di andare avanti e indietro per far uscire il connettore USB. Devo dire che la sensazione di robustezza è molto piacevole e non si corre il rischio di perderla facilmente, cosa che invece può accadere con prodotti molto piccoli. Il "buco" per l'inserimento della chiavetta in un ring o per agganciare un laccetto è in metallo, un pezzo unico con il guscio, ed ha dimensioni generose, si può tranquillamente inserirla in un portachiavi.
<b>Prestazioni</b>
Come ho accennato già, ero particolarmente interessato alle prestazioni in una casistica particolare: la scrittura di un gran numero di file di piccole dimensioni. Spesso questo valore non viene molto pubblicizzato, per una valida ragione: sono pochissime le chiavi USB che hanno performance decenti in questo campo, molte sono lentissime, anche se hanno invece ottimi risultati quando lavorano con file molto grandi.
La chiavetta arriva formattata con eFAT e un blocksize molto grande: 512K. Per chi non fosse avvezzo a questi termini, semplificherò spiegando che il blocksize è lo spazio minimo che viene occupato da un file singolo, anche di lunghezza zero. Una formattazione di questo tipo, per il tipo di uso che ne dovevo fare io, ha un piccolissimo difetto: rende l'occupazione di spazio della chiavetta disastrosa. Per capire l'ordine di grandezza considerate che migrando i file presenti nel mio disco di backup, circa 51GB di spazio occupato in quel caso, la chiavetta Extreme Pro da 128GB veniva occupata per 95GB. Non era un risultato accettabile, quindi dopo aver eseguito dei test di performance ho riformattato cambiando il blocksize a soli 8K. Dopo questo trattamento l'occupazione di spazio degli stessi identici file è passata a 54GB. Se anche voi pensate di utilizzare la chiavetta per memorizzare molti file considerate dunque la riformattazione preventiva.
Nelle foto allegate ci sono vari test da me eseguiti. Con USB2, con USB3, prima e dopo la formattazione (non ci sono grandissime differenze). Sono tuti fatti con la chiavetta già crittografata con Bitlocker. Come prevedibile la velocità di lettura e scrittura sequenziale crolla usando la USB2, ma per me la buona notizia è che in tutte le casistiche ho delle velocità di scrittura dei blocchi da 4k che vanno tra un minimo di 11 a un massimo di 13MB/s. Non pensiate sia un risultato da poco, c'è solo un prodotto sul mercato che fa di meglio, ma al momento non riesco a reperirlo, mentre la chiavetta che segue in classifica questa realizza risultati da 2 a 3MB/s, quindi 3-4 volte inferiori. Nella realtà, confrontando i tempi di backup sul campo dei miei oltre 85 mila file, sono appunto passato da circa 5 ore a un'ora scarsa. Nei backup parziali, dove prima dovevo attendere lunghi minuti, ora sono su qualche manciata di secondi. Prodotto quindi che mi ha risolto un non piccolo problema.
<b>Conclusioni</b>
Il costo di questo prodotto è piuttosto elevato, se confrontato con chiavette della stessa capienza con performance in lettura e scrittura sequenziale simili a quelle raggiunte dall'Extreme Pro. Tuttavia, quando parliamo di scrittura di piccoli file, le cose cambiano drasticamente, evidenziando un prodotto che ha una velocità da 3 a 4 volte superiore ai concorrenti migliori. Il mio consiglio è di valutare il tipo di utilizzo che ne farete. Se vi serve una chiavetta dove memorizzare film, video, grossi file, questa andrà bene, ma avrà un costo superiore a prodotti simili che potrebbero soddisfarvi lo stesso. Ma se avete intenzione di utilizzarla per il backup di computer, di librerie di foto o altri piccoli file, se i tempi con cui queste operazioni vengono portate a termine con altri prodotti non vi soddisfano, allora questo prodotto potrebbe essere un ottimo acquisto.
L'alternativa, la Mushkin MKNUFDVU240GB Ventura Ultra U3 Memoria USB portatile non è al momento facilmente reperibile, ma se tornasse disponibile potrebbe essere un altro prodotto da provare.
NB L'esemplare che ho comprato, ha un problema con i programmi che evidenziano idati SMART. La durata residua di vita del disco USB viene registrata come zero, come se il disco fosse già "rotto". In realtà credo si tratti di un bug del firmware della chiavetta, perché il prodotto funziona perfettamente. Ho inserito un paio di screen che evidenziano il fenomeno.
<b>Aspetti estetici e materiali</b>
La chiavetta arriva in una confezione tradizionale di cartone e plastica, con i soliti dati che potete trovare anche online su velocità e caratteristiche del prodotto. Si tratta di una chiavetta che ricorda i vecchi prodotti, per le dimensioni piuttosto generose. Il meccanismo è a slitta, dunque non ci sono tappini da perdere. C'è da sperare che il blocco che entra in azione non faccia la solita fine, allentandosi e rendendo quindi l'uso disagevole, specialmente inserimento. Per ora nessun problema, ma sono passati pochi giorni.
Il corpo centrale è in plastica, protetto da una specie di guscio esterno in metallo, tranne per la slitta che è libera di andare avanti e indietro per far uscire il connettore USB. Devo dire che la sensazione di robustezza è molto piacevole e non si corre il rischio di perderla facilmente, cosa che invece può accadere con prodotti molto piccoli. Il "buco" per l'inserimento della chiavetta in un ring o per agganciare un laccetto è in metallo, un pezzo unico con il guscio, ed ha dimensioni generose, si può tranquillamente inserirla in un portachiavi.
<b>Prestazioni</b>
Come ho accennato già, ero particolarmente interessato alle prestazioni in una casistica particolare: la scrittura di un gran numero di file di piccole dimensioni. Spesso questo valore non viene molto pubblicizzato, per una valida ragione: sono pochissime le chiavi USB che hanno performance decenti in questo campo, molte sono lentissime, anche se hanno invece ottimi risultati quando lavorano con file molto grandi.
La chiavetta arriva formattata con eFAT e un blocksize molto grande: 512K. Per chi non fosse avvezzo a questi termini, semplificherò spiegando che il blocksize è lo spazio minimo che viene occupato da un file singolo, anche di lunghezza zero. Una formattazione di questo tipo, per il tipo di uso che ne dovevo fare io, ha un piccolissimo difetto: rende l'occupazione di spazio della chiavetta disastrosa. Per capire l'ordine di grandezza considerate che migrando i file presenti nel mio disco di backup, circa 51GB di spazio occupato in quel caso, la chiavetta Extreme Pro da 128GB veniva occupata per 95GB. Non era un risultato accettabile, quindi dopo aver eseguito dei test di performance ho riformattato cambiando il blocksize a soli 8K. Dopo questo trattamento l'occupazione di spazio degli stessi identici file è passata a 54GB. Se anche voi pensate di utilizzare la chiavetta per memorizzare molti file considerate dunque la riformattazione preventiva.
Nelle foto allegate ci sono vari test da me eseguiti. Con USB2, con USB3, prima e dopo la formattazione (non ci sono grandissime differenze). Sono tuti fatti con la chiavetta già crittografata con Bitlocker. Come prevedibile la velocità di lettura e scrittura sequenziale crolla usando la USB2, ma per me la buona notizia è che in tutte le casistiche ho delle velocità di scrittura dei blocchi da 4k che vanno tra un minimo di 11 a un massimo di 13MB/s. Non pensiate sia un risultato da poco, c'è solo un prodotto sul mercato che fa di meglio, ma al momento non riesco a reperirlo, mentre la chiavetta che segue in classifica questa realizza risultati da 2 a 3MB/s, quindi 3-4 volte inferiori. Nella realtà, confrontando i tempi di backup sul campo dei miei oltre 85 mila file, sono appunto passato da circa 5 ore a un'ora scarsa. Nei backup parziali, dove prima dovevo attendere lunghi minuti, ora sono su qualche manciata di secondi. Prodotto quindi che mi ha risolto un non piccolo problema.
<b>Conclusioni</b>
Il costo di questo prodotto è piuttosto elevato, se confrontato con chiavette della stessa capienza con performance in lettura e scrittura sequenziale simili a quelle raggiunte dall'Extreme Pro. Tuttavia, quando parliamo di scrittura di piccoli file, le cose cambiano drasticamente, evidenziando un prodotto che ha una velocità da 3 a 4 volte superiore ai concorrenti migliori. Il mio consiglio è di valutare il tipo di utilizzo che ne farete. Se vi serve una chiavetta dove memorizzare film, video, grossi file, questa andrà bene, ma avrà un costo superiore a prodotti simili che potrebbero soddisfarvi lo stesso. Ma se avete intenzione di utilizzarla per il backup di computer, di librerie di foto o altri piccoli file, se i tempi con cui queste operazioni vengono portate a termine con altri prodotti non vi soddisfano, allora questo prodotto potrebbe essere un ottimo acquisto.
L'alternativa, la Mushkin MKNUFDVU240GB Ventura Ultra U3 Memoria USB portatile non è al momento facilmente reperibile, ma se tornasse disponibile potrebbe essere un altro prodotto da provare.
NB L'esemplare che ho comprato, ha un problema con i programmi che evidenziano idati SMART. La durata residua di vita del disco USB viene registrata come zero, come se il disco fosse già "rotto". In realtà credo si tratti di un bug del firmware della chiavetta, perché il prodotto funziona perfettamente. Ho inserito un paio di screen che evidenziano il fenomeno.
Mario Pacchiarotti
Reviewed in Italy on 23 November 2017
<b>Aspetti estetici e materiali</b>
La chiavetta arriva in una confezione tradizionale di cartone e plastica, con i soliti dati che potete trovare anche online su velocità e caratteristiche del prodotto. Si tratta di una chiavetta che ricorda i vecchi prodotti, per le dimensioni piuttosto generose. Il meccanismo è a slitta, dunque non ci sono tappini da perdere. C'è da sperare che il blocco che entra in azione non faccia la solita fine, allentandosi e rendendo quindi l'uso disagevole, specialmente inserimento. Per ora nessun problema, ma sono passati pochi giorni.
Il corpo centrale è in plastica, protetto da una specie di guscio esterno in metallo, tranne per la slitta che è libera di andare avanti e indietro per far uscire il connettore USB. Devo dire che la sensazione di robustezza è molto piacevole e non si corre il rischio di perderla facilmente, cosa che invece può accadere con prodotti molto piccoli. Il "buco" per l'inserimento della chiavetta in un ring o per agganciare un laccetto è in metallo, un pezzo unico con il guscio, ed ha dimensioni generose, si può tranquillamente inserirla in un portachiavi.
<b>Prestazioni</b>
Come ho accennato già, ero particolarmente interessato alle prestazioni in una casistica particolare: la scrittura di un gran numero di file di piccole dimensioni. Spesso questo valore non viene molto pubblicizzato, per una valida ragione: sono pochissime le chiavi USB che hanno performance decenti in questo campo, molte sono lentissime, anche se hanno invece ottimi risultati quando lavorano con file molto grandi.
La chiavetta arriva formattata con eFAT e un blocksize molto grande: 512K. Per chi non fosse avvezzo a questi termini, semplificherò spiegando che il blocksize è lo spazio minimo che viene occupato da un file singolo, anche di lunghezza zero. Una formattazione di questo tipo, per il tipo di uso che ne dovevo fare io, ha un piccolissimo difetto: rende l'occupazione di spazio della chiavetta disastrosa. Per capire l'ordine di grandezza considerate che migrando i file presenti nel mio disco di backup, circa 51GB di spazio occupato in quel caso, la chiavetta Extreme Pro da 128GB veniva occupata per 95GB. Non era un risultato accettabile, quindi dopo aver eseguito dei test di performance ho riformattato cambiando il blocksize a soli 8K. Dopo questo trattamento l'occupazione di spazio degli stessi identici file è passata a 54GB. Se anche voi pensate di utilizzare la chiavetta per memorizzare molti file considerate dunque la riformattazione preventiva.
Nelle foto allegate ci sono vari test da me eseguiti. Con USB2, con USB3, prima e dopo la formattazione (non ci sono grandissime differenze). Sono tuti fatti con la chiavetta già crittografata con Bitlocker. Come prevedibile la velocità di lettura e scrittura sequenziale crolla usando la USB2, ma per me la buona notizia è che in tutte le casistiche ho delle velocità di scrittura dei blocchi da 4k che vanno tra un minimo di 11 a un massimo di 13MB/s. Non pensiate sia un risultato da poco, c'è solo un prodotto sul mercato che fa di meglio, ma al momento non riesco a reperirlo, mentre la chiavetta che segue in classifica questa realizza risultati da 2 a 3MB/s, quindi 3-4 volte inferiori. Nella realtà, confrontando i tempi di backup sul campo dei miei oltre 85 mila file, sono appunto passato da circa 5 ore a un'ora scarsa. Nei backup parziali, dove prima dovevo attendere lunghi minuti, ora sono su qualche manciata di secondi. Prodotto quindi che mi ha risolto un non piccolo problema.
<b>Conclusioni</b>
Il costo di questo prodotto è piuttosto elevato, se confrontato con chiavette della stessa capienza con performance in lettura e scrittura sequenziale simili a quelle raggiunte dall'Extreme Pro. Tuttavia, quando parliamo di scrittura di piccoli file, le cose cambiano drasticamente, evidenziando un prodotto che ha una velocità da 3 a 4 volte superiore ai concorrenti migliori. Il mio consiglio è di valutare il tipo di utilizzo che ne farete. Se vi serve una chiavetta dove memorizzare film, video, grossi file, questa andrà bene, ma avrà un costo superiore a prodotti simili che potrebbero soddisfarvi lo stesso. Ma se avete intenzione di utilizzarla per il backup di computer, di librerie di foto o altri piccoli file, se i tempi con cui queste operazioni vengono portate a termine con altri prodotti non vi soddisfano, allora questo prodotto potrebbe essere un ottimo acquisto.
L'alternativa, la [[ASIN:B00FSAHJ24 Mushkin MKNUFDVU240GB Ventura Ultra U3 Memoria USB portatile]] non è al momento facilmente reperibile, ma se tornasse disponibile potrebbe essere un altro prodotto da provare.
NB L'esemplare che ho comprato, ha un problema con i programmi che evidenziano idati SMART. La durata residua di vita del disco USB viene registrata come zero, come se il disco fosse già "rotto". In realtà credo si tratti di un bug del firmware della chiavetta, perché il prodotto funziona perfettamente. Ho inserito un paio di screen che evidenziano il fenomeno.
Images in this review
Paolo
1.0 out of 5 stars
velocità reali ma è morta subito anche la seconda
Reviewed in Italy on 1 September 2018Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
Ho formattato in ntfs è le velocità di lettura sotto w10 sono sui 400mb e scrittura sui 360. Si intende di un file da 50gb
tutti i test di velocità corrispondono grossomodo alla realtà quindi non ha cache come altre pennette per falsare i programmi di benchmark. Le sue velocità sono reali. Viene vista come disco ssd con tutti i vantaggi di un disco.
Dentro ha anche i parametri smart come i dischi normali. Infatti dopo mezzora ha segnalato i blocchi rovinati e la riallocazione. Da quel momento in poi ho fatto i test hardware ed i blocchi si sono rotti veramente e sono in funzione quelle di riserva. Cosa che con usb normali non avviene. Ora ho chiesto la sostituzione dato che non si puo' avere una disco con i blocchi rovinati dopo mezzora. apparte la sfiga, il prodotto è ottino , e non scalda sotto stress. Posso affermare che già il fatto che non ci sia un cache truffa per falsare la velocità è un ottima cosa. Certo appena presa va svuotata e formattata in ntfs. Per fare i test correttamente serve un pc che garantisca il flusso idone, non pensate di copiare a 400mb se non avete un ssd capace di mantenere un flusso di 500mb reali e non con la cache.
Nuova verifica; dopo il cambio della penna di amazon anche quella nuova dopo aver scritto tutta la superficie ha segnalato errore smart negli stessi blocchi . Essendo la seconda sembra come se è tutto un lotto difettoso nella stessa parte della memoria.
Posso aggiungere che il problema dei blocchi rovinati in fase di produzione è riportato anche nei forum americani della sandisk, anche nelle recensioni americane di amazon dove la gente lamenta gli stessi problemi su alcuni lotti di questa penna. Posso solo consigliare a tutti di prendere un programma smart tipo crystal disk info 7 che è gratis, poi formattare la penna in ntfs e con un programma di partizioni creare un volume unico e poi fare un test distuttivo di scrittura su tutta la superficie in modo da testare tutti i blocchi e poi vedere se il programma smart segnala i blocchi rovinati, poi decidete se restituire. Sandisk ha detto che sbaglia il loro programma smart, mi chiedo allora perchè abbiano lasciato attivo il modulo interno della penna smart se baglia!! Così se non avete blocchi rotti la tenete altrimenti la restituite. ricordo che i blocchi si vedono solo quando si scrive. Un altro consiglio e' non perdere tempo a scrivere al supporto italiano, fanno solo il copia ed incolla del supporto americano - totalmente inutili
tutti i test di velocità corrispondono grossomodo alla realtà quindi non ha cache come altre pennette per falsare i programmi di benchmark. Le sue velocità sono reali. Viene vista come disco ssd con tutti i vantaggi di un disco.
Dentro ha anche i parametri smart come i dischi normali. Infatti dopo mezzora ha segnalato i blocchi rovinati e la riallocazione. Da quel momento in poi ho fatto i test hardware ed i blocchi si sono rotti veramente e sono in funzione quelle di riserva. Cosa che con usb normali non avviene. Ora ho chiesto la sostituzione dato che non si puo' avere una disco con i blocchi rovinati dopo mezzora. apparte la sfiga, il prodotto è ottino , e non scalda sotto stress. Posso affermare che già il fatto che non ci sia un cache truffa per falsare la velocità è un ottima cosa. Certo appena presa va svuotata e formattata in ntfs. Per fare i test correttamente serve un pc che garantisca il flusso idone, non pensate di copiare a 400mb se non avete un ssd capace di mantenere un flusso di 500mb reali e non con la cache.
Nuova verifica; dopo il cambio della penna di amazon anche quella nuova dopo aver scritto tutta la superficie ha segnalato errore smart negli stessi blocchi . Essendo la seconda sembra come se è tutto un lotto difettoso nella stessa parte della memoria.
Posso aggiungere che il problema dei blocchi rovinati in fase di produzione è riportato anche nei forum americani della sandisk, anche nelle recensioni americane di amazon dove la gente lamenta gli stessi problemi su alcuni lotti di questa penna. Posso solo consigliare a tutti di prendere un programma smart tipo crystal disk info 7 che è gratis, poi formattare la penna in ntfs e con un programma di partizioni creare un volume unico e poi fare un test distuttivo di scrittura su tutta la superficie in modo da testare tutti i blocchi e poi vedere se il programma smart segnala i blocchi rovinati, poi decidete se restituire. Sandisk ha detto che sbaglia il loro programma smart, mi chiedo allora perchè abbiano lasciato attivo il modulo interno della penna smart se baglia!! Così se non avete blocchi rotti la tenete altrimenti la restituite. ricordo che i blocchi si vedono solo quando si scrive. Un altro consiglio e' non perdere tempo a scrivere al supporto italiano, fanno solo il copia ed incolla del supporto americano - totalmente inutili
🥇 Melollevo
5.0 out of 5 stars
Velocidad de transferencia y capacidad adecuados
Reviewed in Spain on 20 April 2019Size Name: 128gbStyle Name: SingleVerified Purchase
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Habría estado mejor que tuviera un recubrimiento de aluminio y no de plástico, que le daría una presencia y durabilidad digna de un producto premium.
De momento, cumple perfectamente su cometido y no tiene competencia en el ámbito de las tarjetas de memoria (al mismo precio no se obtienen 100MB/seg. de escritura), ni en el de los pendrives.
Bienvenidos a la era del estado sólido ☠️💿.











