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If you compare a MicroSD card with an advertised speed of 48 MB/S to a full size SD card with an advertised speed of 48 MB/S (from the same manufacturer), should their performances be identical?

Or is there anything about the size reduction of a MicroSD card that makes it perform better or worse?

Similarly if you take that MicroSD card, and place it in a MicroSD-to-full-size-SD converter (from the same manufacturer), will it perform identically to the equivalent full size SD card?

As examples, one could compare the SanDisk Ultra PLUS microSDXC card with the SanDisk Ultra PLUS SDHC card. In this example, the comparison would be both with and without the MicroSD-to-full-size-SD converter.

BTW, on the packaging, the specs are identical, but I'm interested in knowing if, in the real world, there are any performance differences.

2 Answers 2

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There is no direct relationship between the physical size and performance.

The form factor defines the size of the plastic shell. What is inside is based on the same chip manufacturing technology. Technology improvements, in the industry overall or by a specific chip manufacturer, can go into either form factor.

Putting a MicroSD card in an SD adapter doesn't change it's characteristics.

The adapter doesn't perform any signal processing, it is basically just a spacer with electrical contacts.

enter image description here
Thanks to Jason C for the picture from camerahacker.com

Form Factor Differences

The MicroSD form factor has a lower maximum capacity and lacks a write-protect switch. The smaller format is generally more expensive at the current time. This Wikipedia link describes the technical differences in the specs for the two sizes (and many other memory card formats).

Performance Classes

There are different classes of performance, and cards can be manufactured in any class, regardless of size. However, at any given time, there may be less availability of super-fast cards in one or the other format, and there may be specific examples of cards in one format that are faster than supposedly similar cards in the other format.

Manufacturer Speed Designations

Even within the same manufacturer, the labeling doesn't necessarily tell you anything about the inherent differences between the form factors. For example, SanDisk could have developed a faster card in a MicroSD format than their last fastest card in the SD format, and labeled them both "Extreme". That doesn't mean the MicroSD format is inherently better. It just means that right now, you can buy a faster MicroSD card from SanDisk than their SD card with the same label.

Nature of the Cards and Manufacturing Process

Don't think of these cards as identical, precision parts. It is the opposite.

  • There is great variability in the manufactured output, and the process deals with yields and salvage. The product labeling is based on what bucket post-production testing puts them in.

  • The raw product is a commodity, and the quality and quantity of what is available in the marketplace varies. One comment describes a certain memory card seller as using "catch-of-the day".

So the performance of a specific MicroSD card may be less similar to an "identical" card from the same manufacturer as to a specific SD card from another manufacturer.

The Bottom Line

You can't rely on the form factor or the manufacturers' model names to know what is currently the fastest available card. The form factor is not the driving variable and the manufacturers' product names aren't specific or reliable measures of performance.

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    Thanks. The SD adapter doesn't cause any reduction in performance at all? (When I say "at all", I mean anything that a program like CrystalDiskMark can detect. It doesn't matter if a 60 minute operation is 1 nanosecond faster/slower overall, but a difference of even 1 second for a 60 minute test does matter.) Dec 1, 2014 at 9:46
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    Can you explain the vastly faster speeds of the microSD cards when compared to identically performance-spec'd full size SD cards (from the same manufacturer) as reported in the article in PhilippT's answer? I can't explain that one. Maybe you can... Dec 1, 2014 at 9:54
  • The SD adapter doesn't perform any signal processing, it's basically just electrical contacts. I don't know what to make of the table in that article and what testing it reflects. One difference: the cards are different capacities. I don't know if "Extreme" is a regulated term and whether it refers to a specific performance vs. a range of performance. The fact that one company offers two products labeled "Extreme" doesn't mean they have the same thing under the hood. They could have made a better MicroSD card than SD card. That doesn't necessarily relate to the form factor.
    – fixer1234
    Dec 1, 2014 at 10:09
  • There can be a lot of variation from card to card. My understanding is that they manufacture cards and then test them to see how fast they are, how much usable capacity they have, etc. Then they label them accordingly. SanDisk may have a MicroSD card they label "Extreme" and and SD card they label "Extreme", and that MicroSD card may be faster than that SD card. But that doesn't tell you whether one form factor is inherently faster than the other. The issue is really how do you find the fastest card in either format.
    – fixer1234
    Dec 1, 2014 at 10:18
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    @RockPaperLizard: My previous company did. We did discover that two identically marked cards would often have different internals, especially those sold in the consumer market. SanDisk specifically was identified as a brand which will sell you catch-of-the-day. We ended up going with a supplier that guaranteed the chips used, but at a price twice that of consumer brands despite 100K unit volumes.
    – MSalters
    Dec 1, 2014 at 12:06
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The only thing that has ANY meaning is the speed-class or UHS rating of the card.
Any other indication/name/label whatever is just marketing blurb and doesn't mean anything.

This is the small number with a capital C around it for older cards (speedclass) or the number with a capital U around it for newer cards (UHS).
Speedclass goes upto 10 and should be read as: ZZ Megabytes/second write speed.
UHS currently goes up to 3 (might go higher in the future) and should be read as: ZZ * 10 Megabytes/second.
E.g. UHS-3 is 30 MB/s and SC-4 is 4 MB/s.

The class indicates the MINIMUM write speed the card can handle. And nothing else.
The speed-rating is only valid for sustained write through-put with the FAT32 filesystem. Random-access behavior or performance when formatted using a different filesystem may vary wildly (and is usually worse).

Manufacturers usually source the components from various chip-makers and it is quite possible those chips don't perform the same. 2 identical cards can perform differently because there is no telling if they both use exactly the same innards.
But they should at least be able to do the minimum advertized speed as advertized by the class.
The form-factor (SD, Micro-SD, nano-SD, with or without adapter) doesn't say anything about the chip inside and has no bearing on the performance.

Typically: Cheap cards usually just make their speed-rating barely. It's a cut-throat market with low margins and every corner that can be cut will be cut.
There is a reason professional photographers/filmers tend to buy the expensive high-end cards. They usually perform better and are also less prone to bit-rot after prolonged use. And the more expensive stuff usually comes with a warranty that lasts longer than the time it takes the buyer to leave the shop with the card.

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