Western Digital’s SanDisk division on Friday unveiled its first lineup of microSD cards that are compliant with the App Performance 2 (A2) specification. The new SanDisk Extreme cards are designed primarily for smartphones, so they do not offer very high sequential read/write speeds, yet in accordance with the A2 requirements, they offer rather high random performance for a removable memory card, making them better suited for running apps off of them.

The new SanDisk Extreme microSD cards with A2 badge will be available in 32 GB, 64 GB, 128 GB, 256 GB, and 400 GB capacities. The new memory cards use the UHS-I bus and are rated for up to 90 MB/s sequential read speeds as well as up to 60 - 70 MB/s sequential write speeds, depending on the capacity (32 and 64 GB cards are a tad slower). The cards also carry the V30 badge and therefore support a minimum of 30 MB/s write speed.

More importantly, in line with the A2 requirements, the new SanDisk Extreme microSD have a random performance of at least 4000 read IOPS and 2000 write IOPS (keep in mind that Western Digital does not disclose actual performance of the card, which may exceed A2 requirements). In addition to enhanced random performance (vs. 1500/500 read/write IOPS mandated by the A1), A2 cards are required to support such functions as command queuing (with a minimum depth queue of 2 and a maximum depth queue of 32) to optimize random read performance, caching to hit write performance targets, as well as self-maintenance capabilities.

The SD Association’s A2 spec was designed specifically to improve performance of applications that are installed on microSD cards. In fact, the latest versions of Android only allow users to install apps on A1/A2-badged microSDs. With enhanced random read/write speeds, the new cards will be a better fit for apps that perform a lot of read/write operations and will therefore significantly improve user experience. Meanwhile, just like their predecessors available today, the new SanDisk Extreme cards are compliant with UHS Speed Class 3 and Video Speed Class 30 specs, thus providing at least 30 MB/s sequential write speed and simultaneous interleaving of eight different files, which is useful for 360° videos, or even numerous high-quality Ultra-HD still pictures taken simultaneously.

To further ensure that the new SanDisk Extreme cards are suitable for photographers and drones that happen to work in rough conditions, they are designed to operate in the range between -13ºF to 185ºF (-25ºC to 85ºC).

SanDisk Extreme microSD Cards with A2
  400 GB 256 GB 128 GB 64 GB 32 GB
Sequential Read Speed up to 90 MB/s
Sequential Write Speed 70 MB/s 60 MB/s
Minimum Sequential Write Speed 30 MB/s
Random Read Speed At least 4000 IOPS
Random Write Speed At least 2000 IOPS
Operating Temperatures -13ºF to 185ºF (-25ºC to 85ºC)
Interface UHS-I
Availability Q4 2018
SDA Labels A2, V30, U3

Traditionally for SanDisk Extreme microSD cards, the new products will ship with the SanDisk Memory Zone (helps to organize data on Android-based devices and effortlessly back it up to the card) and RescuePRO (simplifies recovery of files that were accidentally deleted) apps.

Western Digital Japan plans to start sales of its SanDisk Extreme microSD cards with A2 badge on October 12. It is unknown when these cards hit other markets, but it is highly likely that this is going to happen shortly. Western Digital is the first company to announce its A2-compliant microSD cards officially. At least one vendor has demonstrated such cards on various occasions, but so far has neither listed them nor started their sales.

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Source: SanDisk, Hermitage Akihabara

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  • PeachNCream - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    Quick random access...I'm thinking one of these might be a good replacement for my 4GB SD card that I'm using as swap space on my laptop.
  • phoenix_rizzen - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    From the article:
    More importantly, in line with the A2 requirements, the new SanDisk Extreme microSD have a random performance of at least 4000 write IOPS and 2000 write IOPS

    Guessing one of those "write" should be a "read"?
  • SteelRing - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    Just bought this a couple weeks ago 128GB for $42 from amz0n, still not shipped yet though.
  • Ryan Smith - Saturday, October 6, 2018 - link

    Indeed it is. Thanks!
  • Xajel - Sunday, October 7, 2018 - link

    This will be good if it was released 1 ago, now the future will be SD Express standard.

    Sadly, by the time those SD Express microSD cards comes with capacities and price good enough more smartphones will get rid of the microSD slot it self.
  • lada - Monday, October 8, 2018 - link

    Does anybody know, whether the command queues can be used with Raspberry Pi? I don't know if it's kernel issue or hardware issue (or lack thereof). As far as I have tested, only Sandisk Ultra and Extreme microSD cards are usable with RPI, because of their controllers - it hides flash errors very well and probably has some write buffer.

    When RPI starts to swap under Raspbian, it's real pain even with Ultras. It involves many scattered sectors - random write performance is king here.
  • JoeDuarte - Thursday, October 11, 2018 - link

    Man, the SD card industry has made such an incomprehensible mess of standards. Look at the pictured card – it has at least four ratings:

    - A2
    - V30
    - MicroSD XC I, which might refer to the UHS-I bus.
    - and a 3 in a bucket, which apparently means UHS Speed Class 3

    It think it's almost impossible for customers to know what all this stuff means.
  • abufrejoval - Friday, October 12, 2018 - link

    At those figures I wonder about heat. These things have a tiny amount of surface area and go into slots not necessarily designed for cooling: How much heat are microSD cards allowed to dissipate?

    Can they sustain the given performance levels for say 10 minutes or will they need to throttle for heat?
  • ravib123 - Sunday, November 11, 2018 - link

    THIS IS A STRICTLY DO NOT BUY PRODUCT.

    Sandisk doesn’t honor their warranties and has a high failure rate. I had to give up on the warranty and buy intel/samsung/micron who do honor their warranties.

    Lessons learned.
  • ProDigit - Monday, August 12, 2019 - link

    It only works for A2 compatible disks.
    Writing an ISO to an A2 microSD card (including the 64GB one) is written at 70MB/s.
    Not all MicroSD cards support this card. Some can't read it, others can, but it won't work any faster than a standard Class 10, U1 SD card.
    My theory is that the controller runs on 5V instead of the standard 3.3V.
    Using it with a MicroSD card reader at 3,3V, and the performance is pretty slow.
    A1 cards are faster. Especially on the Raspberry Pi 1 - 3B+ (not sure if anything under the RaspBerry Pi 3 actually recognizes an A2 card, but it does work in Raspbian and Buster on the Pi 3).

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