128GB SanDisk High Endurance U3 V30 Video microSDXC Card
$15.90
$25.99
+28Deal Score
18,790 Views
Amazon has 128GB SanDisk High Endurance U3 V30 Video microSDXC Card (SDSQQNR-128G-GN6IA) for $15.92. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on orders of $25+.
B&H Photo Video has 128GB SanDisk High Endurance U3 V30 Video microSDXC Card (SDSQQNR-128G-GN6IA). for $15.92. Shipping is free on orders of $49+, otherwise shipping costs start at $3.99.
Newegg has 128GB SanDisk High Endurance U3 V30 Video microSDXC Card (SDSQQNR-128G-GN6IA). for $15.92. Shipping is free on orders of $25+, otherwise shipping costs start at $3.99.
Thanks to Community Member cheapnchong for finding this deal.
Features:
128GB Storage Capacity
UHS-I / V30 / U3 / Class 10
Max Read Speed: 100 MB/s
Max Write Speed: 40 MB/s
Min Write Speed: 30 MB/s
Records and 4K and Full HD Video
Water / Shock / X-Ray Proof
Can Withstand Extreme Temperatures
Built-In Write-Protect Switch on Adapter
Downloadable RescuePRO Recovery Software
Editor's Notes & Price Research
Written by
About this product:
Rating of 4.7 from over 40,000 Amazon customer reviews.
About this store:
Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
You may be able to price match at BB if you prefer that route and save on shipping & take care of fake card issues.
Designed for dash cams and home monitoring systems, the 128GB High Endurance UHS-I microSDXC Memory Card from SanDisk has an operational life of up to 10,000 hours of recording time. It can capture 4K and Full HD video, has a storage capacity of 128GB, is compatible with the UHS-I bus, and features a speed class rating of V30, which guarantees that write speeds will not drop below 30 MB/s.
Model: SanDisk High Endurance 128 GB Class 10 microSD
Deal History
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
SanDisk 128GB High Endurance Video MicroSDXC Card with Adapter for Dash Cam and Home Monitoring systems - C10, U3, V30, 4K UHD, Micro SD Card - SDSQQNR-128G-GN6IA
Manufacturer:
SanDisk
Model Number:
SDSQQNR-128G-GN6IA
Product SKU:
B07NY23WBG
ASIN:
B07NY23WBG
Brand:
SanDisk
Item Dimensions LxWxH:
0.04 x 0.59 x 0.43 Inches
Item Weight:
0.010008987 Pounds
Item model number:
SDSQQNR-128G-GN6IA
Manufacturer:
SanDisk
Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
If you're not a student, there's also a free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.
You can also earn cash back rewards on Amazon and Whole Foods purchases with the Amazon Prime Visa credit card. Read our review to see if it’s the right card for you.
Learned my lesson buying 6 of these all dead after 2 years. Samsung endurance 128gb still going with my Wyze, Hikvision and Amcrest.
I quit using SanDisk long ago, due to many problems and compatibility issues especially in the dash cams & surveillance cams I run, so I no longer have their 'checker'.
I use solely Samsungs, which has a verification checker at the bottom of the page of the link below: https://semiconductor.samsung.com...ort/tools/
Another good utility to check card capacity (which is 99% falsified in fake cards) and speeds is the utility program h2testw, which can best/safest be found at its originator's website: https://www.heise.de/download/pro...estw-50539
(It's a German page, so use Google translate if you need to)
I verify ALL of my cards, regardless of source.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
How does one determine if a fake was received from Amazon?
It's not worth it. Amazon inventories among different sellers are pooled if they are supposed to be the same item. Items like this are often contaminated with fakes among the real. B&H will have no such issue.
Tho the problem is over-exaggerated, counterfeit cards can be injected into the supply chain of any vendor.
My tested card, from any vendor, is 100% verified.
Your untested card, from B&H or anyone, has 0% verification.
Just blind faith on reputation, which still isn't verification.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank WildRigger47
02-21-2023 at 09:00 PM.
Quote
from dweezy
:
How does one determine if a fake was received from Amazon?
I quit using SanDisk long ago, due to many problems and compatibility issues especially in the dash cams & surveillance cams I run, so I no longer have their 'checker'.
I use solely Samsungs, which has a verification checker at the bottom of the page of the link below: https://semiconductor.samsung.com...ort/tools/
Another good utility to check card capacity (which is 99% falsified in fake cards) and speeds is the utility program h2testw, which can best/safest be found at its originator's website: https://www.heise.de/download/pro...estw-50539
(It's a German page, so use Google translate if you need to)
I verify ALL of my cards, regardless of source.
How does one determine if a fake was received from Amazon?
If you own a Mac then do the Blackmagic disk speed tester with the 5gb load which should return at least 30MBps for a V30 rated card like this. Maybe let it run a few times just to be sure. Then use the command line tool named f3 which IIRC is an implementation of the famous h2testw just compatible with mac/linux. You can install it via homebrew. This should verify that it isn't using fake capacity. These two tests together are even better than authenticity checker apps since they can detect faulty cards as well.
Tho the problem is over-exaggerated, counterfeit cards can be injected into the supply chain of any vendor.
My tested card, from any vendor, is 100% verified.
Your untested card, from B&H or anyone, has 0% verification.
Just blind faith on reputation, which still isn't verification.
Amazon has a seller marketplace and from what others mentioned all the inventory for an item that is "shipped by Amazon.com" gets muddied together.
BH and BB don't have marketplace sellers to contaminate the inventory thus far less counterfeits.
Amazon has a seller marketplace and from what others mentioned all the inventory for an item that is "shipped by Amazon.com" gets muddied together.
BH and BB don't have marketplace sellers to contaminate the inventory thus far less counterfeits.
Therein lies the problem (the bolded/italicized part).
I'd feel very safe to say that not a single one of these ppl have first hand in-depth knowledge of exactly how Amazon handles their inventories, nor how Amazon keeps 3rd party seller inventories 'managed' and separated as that's the only accurate way to determine who or which 3rd party seller gets paid for the product.
These ppl act as if there's just one huge bin in the middle of an Amazon warehouse and all sd/sdxc cards of any particular brand and GB capacity get dumped into that bin, regardless of the source seller.
With BH and BB you're totally omitting the fact, or blind to how counterfeit products can be injected into their supply chain even before they reach BH or BB. Many counterfeit operations can be enabled at the many ports and shipping docks during that products travels from Asia to the US.
I've worked a port city where these type of counterfeit operations occurred, where organized crime operations managers and dock workers at shipping or distribution hubs or docks would swap out tons of legitimate products for counterfeit products in huge profitable schemes.
Places like BB and BH would be totally unaware, as this occurs long before the product reaches them.
Over the years I've bought well over 20 memory cards from Amazon and not a single one was fake/counterfeit. The problem is massively overblown and massively exaggerated, typically due to a handful of buyers (amongst millions) who get a fake card from a 3rd party seller and then say "Amazon sells fake cards!".
Then everyone else spreads these 'not the entire story' rumors.
35 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Featured Comments
I use solely Samsungs, which has a verification checker at the bottom of the page of the link below:
https://semiconductor.s
Another good utility to check card capacity (which is 99% falsified in fake cards) and speeds is the utility program h2testw, which can best/safest be found at its originator's website: https://www.heise.de/download/pro...estw-50539
(It's a German page, so use Google translate if you need to)
I verify ALL of my cards, regardless of source.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank MBis
Don't test. Go with B&H .
It's not worth it. Amazon inventories among different sellers are pooled if they are supposed to be the same item. Items like this are often contaminated with fakes among the real. B&H will have no such issue.
My tested card, from any vendor, is 100% verified.
Your untested card, from B&H or anyone, has 0% verification.
Just blind faith on reputation, which still isn't verification.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank WildRigger47
I use solely Samsungs, which has a verification checker at the bottom of the page of the link below:
https://semiconductor.s
Another good utility to check card capacity (which is 99% falsified in fake cards) and speeds is the utility program h2testw, which can best/safest be found at its originator's website: https://www.heise.de/download/pro...estw-50539
(It's a German page, so use Google translate if you need to)
I verify ALL of my cards, regardless of source.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
just because this is Sandisk, stay away.
My tested card, from any vendor, is 100% verified.
Your untested card, from B&H or anyone, has 0% verification.
Just blind faith on reputation, which still isn't verification.
BH and BB don't have marketplace sellers to contaminate the inventory thus far less counterfeits.
BH and BB don't have marketplace sellers to contaminate the inventory thus far less counterfeits.
I'd feel very safe to say that not a single one of these ppl have first hand in-depth knowledge of exactly how Amazon handles their inventories, nor how Amazon keeps 3rd party seller inventories 'managed' and separated as that's the only accurate way to determine who or which 3rd party seller gets paid for the product.
These ppl act as if there's just one huge bin in the middle of an Amazon warehouse and all sd/sdxc cards of any particular brand and GB capacity get dumped into that bin, regardless of the source seller.
With BH and BB you're totally omitting the fact, or blind to how counterfeit products can be injected into their supply chain even before they reach BH or BB. Many counterfeit operations can be enabled at the many ports and shipping docks during that products travels from Asia to the US.
I've worked a port city where these type of counterfeit operations occurred, where organized crime operations managers and dock workers at shipping or distribution hubs or docks would swap out tons of legitimate products for counterfeit products in huge profitable schemes.
Places like BB and BH would be totally unaware, as this occurs long before the product reaches them.
Over the years I've bought well over 20 memory cards from Amazon and not a single one was fake/counterfeit. The problem is massively overblown and massively exaggerated, typically due to a handful of buyers (amongst millions) who get a fake card from a 3rd party seller and then say "Amazon sells fake cards!".
Then everyone else spreads these 'not the entire story' rumors.