ADATA Premier Pro 32GB UHS-1 microSDHC Review
ATTO
The ATTO Disk Benchmark performance measurement tool is compatible with Microsoft Windows. Measure your storage systems performance with various transfer sizes and test lengths for reads and writes. Several options are available to customize your performance measurement including queue depth, overlapped I/O and even a comparison mode with the option to run continuously. Use ATTO Disk Benchmark to test any manufacturers RAID controllers, storage controllers, host adapters, hard drives and SSD drives and notice that ATTO products will consistently provide the highest level of performance to your storage.
Starting off looking at ATTO’s baseline performance and looking at the 1024k sector, ADATA’s card appears to fall short on both its read and write speeds by 7-8MB/s.
I AM IN IT TO WIN IT I CAN USE IT SEND ONE MY WAY
The question is how does this card compare to cards around the £15 mark. Sure these tend to have a slower write speed, but they can have a comparable or better (on paper) performance. For example: http://www.mymemory.co.uk/Micro-SDHC/Samsung/Samsung-32GB-Micro-SDHC-Plus-up-to-48MB_s-Class-10-UHS-1, http://www.mymemory.co.uk/Micro-SDHC/PNY/PNY-32GB-High-Performance-Micro-SD-Card-%28SDHC%29-50-MB_s-UHS-1-Class-10-%2B-SD-Adapter, http://www.mymemory.co.uk/Micro-SDHC/Integral/Integral-32GB-UltimaPro-Micro-SDHC-Card-40MB_s-Including-Adapter—Class-10-.
Was the card reader used USB2 or USB3? It seems like it was being limited to USB2 speeds…
Just curious as I’m looking at getting one of these, yes I know, 1 year later, but these results could influence my purchase decision!