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Reviewbucket.co.uk scanned the internet for SanDisk SDHC Ultra 32GB Class 10 UHS-I (SDSDUN-032G-G46) reviews.
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For SanDisk SDHC Ultra 32GB Class 10 UHS-I (SDSDUN-032G-G46), 3593 customer reviews collected from 2 e-commerce sites, and the average score is 4.6.

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21.11.2014

I've not used SD cards for file storage before, I've always used either micro SD (in the android phone), incumbent storage on the laptop or an external hard drive - so I wasn't sure what I was going to get or if it was going to work in my laptop or in the car. Also, there are so many fakes out there it is always a gamble. But I had a flick through the reviews on this item, and its SanDisk which is reputable, so if genuine I felt sure it would be bob on for something. And it didn't cost very much so no great loss.I ordered the card to store music files, to put into the SD slot on the CD player in a new car. This too is a new experience for me, I had a CD changer in my old vehicle which was 12 years old,so I'm not particularly au fait with all the new features that come with cars now although I'm aware of the technology available. The card worked fine in my HP laptop and copying music files to it was quick enough - that was a good start. I tested file depth before committing everything I wanted to it, to make sure I copied albums over in a way that would be easily identifiable on the screen in the car. Interestingly, an album that was 3 folders deep was detected but the top folder was ignored, so reviews that mention a 2 folder depth capacity mean just that. So, a Folder for the Artist, with multiple sub-folders for the Album, and then under each the tracks for each respective album, would only detect the Album level folder and the tracks directly below.After that quick test to ensure the card was readable and the music was displayed, selectable and playable, I've copied over loads of music to it but still have room for more should I want it. I renamed the Album folders I copied so they were all prefaced with the Artist. So they're in the format Artist - Album Name. That groups them together on screen.The sound quality is good to my ear, but this does depend in part on how the music was stored on disk in the first place (especially if ripped from a CD). Navigating through the tracks on the car's entertainment system is quick, a lot quicker than I anticipated, and this is due to the quality of the card and the cars system, rather than the data on it. All in all it I'm completely satisfied and chuffed to bits that I can store so much music on this card, and have access to it via the touchscreen panel in the car. I'm still in the hazy honeymoon phase so I don't know what to listen to next!It is possible to go up and down tracks, and this will take you folder to folder; so if you go back to Track 1 on Album B, and then go back another track, it takes you to the last Track on the previous Album A. Unfortunately, unless you use the touchscreen to navigate up a level and change folders, you aren't able to change albums without going up and down the track list of each album, but if you've quick thumbs you can do that quite quickly. The card responds well when doing this, there's no delay that causes you to think you may have broken it.Just for reference, the card has gone into a Volkswagen Golf Match, the new model that was released in September 2014. The SD slot is in the CD player in the glovebox and the files are accessed via the car's entertainment system. You can navigate the files via the touchscreen or go up and down using the controls on the steering wheel. All in all, it's great and I'm very pleased. A bargain considering what it delivers.
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16.11.2014

With 1,065 reviews (at the time of writing) averaging 4.5 out of five stars, I'm not sure exactly what I can add in a review that hasn't already been said before many, many times.I've been using "modern" computers since 1997 (anything before this date was a games console or a BBC Micro!) and despite being quite familiar with them, I never cease to be amazed by the continual increase in storage, both in hard drives and memory cards/sticks and the continual decrease in the price. My first PC in 1997 had a 100MB hard drive and I remember enviously looking at a catalogue at a 9GB hard drive, the biggest available at the time (I forget the price).It was only a few years ago that I paid about £50for an 8GB USB stick and that was my last foray into digital storage so learning that a 32GB SD card was as cheap as £20 came as a big shock.This card has gone straight in my DSLR (Canon EOS 550d) and the display tells me that I have room for approximately 3,493 photos. I can't remember how big the first card I put in the camera was but I think it only gave me about 1/4 of this amount (so probably an 8GB card, come to think of it).I'm quite bad for taking hundreds of photos at a time and leaving them unsorted on the camera for months so to be honest this card may be quite bad for me. Even at the rate I take photos it will be a while before lack of space will necessitate a sort out! However, I imagine the card's vast storage will be a great benefit to professional photographers who may take thousands of photographs over the course of a few days or weeks (and this card comes in 128GB as well!)I have not tried to use the card with video files but my only other Class 10 SD card is a cheapo model and I've never had any problems with that. For me, SanDisk have always delivered quality products and I've never had a problem with them. I assume the main thing people will want to know about data transfer is how fast files copy to a computer but I'm afraid I'm not the guy to ask about that. However, there are 1,064 other reviews for this card and I bet someone else has already covered it!All in all, I can't recommend this card enough. It does exactly what I need it to (and I do have a camcorder so it will probably end up in there at some point), it has a boat-load of storage and it's cheap, cheap, CHEAP!
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14.3.2015

SanDisk 16GB Ultra Class 10 SDHC Up to 48MB/s (SDSDUN-0016G-G46). According to its manufacturers, this disk is ideal for recording high-quality videos with a point-and-shoot digital camera or camcorder; it will enable the user to get the best performance from such a device. The disk can capture full HD video (1080p) with class 10 performance: it is ideal for recording high-speed action. Its quick write speeds can capture fast-action photos. In addition, read speeds of up to 40 MB/s (3) minimize the time the user must spend waiting to transfer videos to computer.The SanDisk Ultra SDHC UHS-I Memory Card offers a write speed that is twice as fast as the write speed of an ordinary memory card: it can reduce between-shot time,allowing the user to shoot fast-action sequences with any point-and-shoot digital camera or camcorder. The card is temperature proof, shockproof, X-ray proof, and waterproof: it can survive harsh conditions so that the user can keep on recording. It has 16 GB of storage so that it can accommodate full HD videos, photos, music, and more; it can store thousands of photos and up to 20 minutes of Full HD video. And it is compatible with any SDHC compatible device. The memory card can easily back up files with its "SanDisk Memory Zone" app. It comes with a ten year warranty.Sorry, but I’ve never progressed much beyond point and shoot cameras, though I do try to upgrade, over time, to the quickest and sharpest available at popular prices. So it was a point and shoot for our anniversary trip. When we recently went on a long, tough, once-in-a-lifetime voyage in Russia. And we don’t exactly speak much Russian. You can bet that I wasn’t fooling around when it came to memory cards. I needed the reliable, multi-featured best, and this is what I got. Recommended.
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22.4.2017

This one actually got ordered by error in a rush with the intention of purchasing a 64gb SanDisk micro SD,, not a standard SD lol. (Now you definitely know I'm reviewing honestly lol)....However, almost all of my SD cards are now older, slower types and classes and many are 32gb anyway, so I decided to keep it. I've done the usual benchmarking tests for read and write speeds of this class of card and it's fast, very fast!! I have stacks of different data cards from older larger compact flash to newer smaller SD and micro SD and one brand that has consistently outperformed and certainly outlasted many other brands repeatedly is SanDisk. I have SanDisk cards that are many years old that still work perfectly.They are frequently counterfeited however,so purchase from a seller with high feedback ratings. Even then, fakes are getting so good on the exterior now even the most diligent retailer can sometimes miss them if not paying attention. Make sure you benchmark any new card to check its performance that you have genuine goods. It takes seconds to test a new card and there are various programmes and apps to aid with benchmarking the basics, it's not a chore as it once was.Card was supplied in standard secure blister pack retail packaging. Performance is good which makes transferring files on and off less of a job than it used to be. Would definitely recommend SanDisk, for the price of their cards they perform very well and last longer than many other brands. I've never had a SanDisk micro SD fail on me out of countless cards and I can only recall one SanDisk SD card failing and I didn't exactly look after it particularly well.Would always happily recommend SanDisk for any type of data card. 5/5.
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5.11.2014

I have occasionally tried other brands of Memory Card, but always return to SanDisk as the most reliable and reasonably-priced for what you get. At the moment, I am using the "Ultra" and "Extreme" Cards with my DSLR : Nikon D7100. This camera has two slots for memory cards, so it is particularly suited to comparing cards. I have been using a mixture of 32Gb and 64 Gb cards. The Ultra is cheaper and supposedly slower than the Extreme. But I have been able to put this card and an Extreme 32Gb in my D7100 at the same time and for still photography, there is very little difference between the two. I suspect you might notice it when shooting video,but I don't do this much and the bulk of my experience is with still photography.This can still be demanding on cards though and particularly if you are shooting wildlife or sports, you might want a faster card for "bursts" of consecutive shots and I think both cope very well. I always shoot in "RAW" which can create large files. This card (32Gb) gives you about 600 images in RAW , which is fair enough - especially if like me, you are using a DSLR with two slots; but I have started to use 64Gb cards as these are not too expensive and as I was saying, the Ultra is not that much different to the Extreme. I have been using the Ultra 64Gb cards for the last 6 months or so and have been very happy - totally reliable and up to all the demands of shooting wildlife in RAW.The 32Gb cards are obviously cheaper and if you are shooting compressed JPEGs then you will probably not need anything larger. The SanDisk range is excellent for DSLRs and I can't recommend them highly enough.
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21.7.2016

I've tried a lot of other brands in my Panasonic GX7 recently but over the last couple of months I had been using Integral cards, which had been great in my phone and Shield TV but for some reason I kept getting write errors on my camera. I didn't suspect the Integral card at first as up until now they'd been flawless, and two seperate cards seemed to be giving the same problems which seemed unlikely but I can confirm that after swapping the card for this one all my problems has vanished and the camera now operates perfectly. The integral should have had similar spec on paper to this Ultra card, but for some reason it's safe to say my camera much prefers the Sandisk.It's now operating flawlessly on operations that would previously have given me issue such as taking stills whilst recording HD video. With the Integral cards I would hit a "write error" message even hour or two during use, but now everything is absolutely flawless again. I've tested it significantly by swapping between the cards since and it is definite that for whatever reason the GX7 just didn't like the other cards. A nice problem to have solved as I had convinced myself it was the camera at fault.As usual with Prime this arrived next day. I had plumped for the frustration free packaging which was exactly as you'd expect. From now on any cards I buy for camera use will be Sandisk, although I'll continue to use other brands (which can be a fair bit cheaper, especially on larger sizes like 128gb) for other less demanding applications such as phone storage.
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11.4.2016

Ah, little plastic card of memories. Having acquired an 8GB card by pure chance I realised I could barely capture 50 or 60 RAW images upon its tiny size. With an upcoming holiday and numerous demands from clients and friends alike to take photographs I realised I needed more memory.My initial idea of buying 10 or 15 of the 8GB cards I already knew and loved proved complex and potentially impractical as I would have to carry numerous cards and devise an ingenious indexing system involving notebooks and secret symbols so I knew what was where. It was only when I chanced upon this lovely that the penny dropped.Why have lots of cards when I could keep everything on just one?On the morning it arrivedI was delighted to see Amazon's helper gnomes had already removed the cursed plastic packaging for me and with much excitement found my camera. There were a few minutes of excitement as I wondered whether a larger memory would mean the card wouldn't fit in that little slot so conveniently hidden beneath a protective cover. I need not have worried.Not only did it slide in with no effort at all, I was soon able to take photographs of my lunch, the person who'd parked irresponsibly across the neighbour's drive and various humorous cats, all ready for me to upload to all my Facebook friends later.So thank you, SanDisk, for removing that difficult decision about which images to keep. Now I can take literally hundreds at a time and annoy my friends endlessly.
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5.11.2014

I'm a cheapskate. Perhaps this has something to do with being a poor-ish student, but I always take the minimum viable product; for example, the 8GB smartphone if I know I won't need any more storage than that. This extends to SD cards.Before Amazon kindly offered me one of these for the purposes of testing, I was using a class 4 (which basically means, it's a lot slower at saving and reading data) 16GB SD card with my Chromebook and camera. This, unsurprisingly, is far superior.I'm honestly not sure whether or not I was sent the frustration-free packaging version of this, but I probably was, as opening it literally involved ripping open the slim cardboard sleeve and then tearing away the paper back of the smaller plastic enclosure for the card itself.With regards to the card itself,what is one supposed to say? It's a 32 gig card and can store and access things snappily. It works as intended, in other words.If you're a real penny-pincher, chances are you can get away with the (s)lower class models. If you want to save yourself some hassle and intend on using it a lot, it's probably a good idea to opt for something like this, instead.As a guide, 32 gigs is a lot. Unless you're planning on storing hundreds of RAW format photos at a time or shooting dozens of hours of HD video, chances are a 32 gig card will be more than enough for you.
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6.11.2014

I've used lots of SanDisk cards, SD and CF, and found them to always be excellent quality. This Class 10 40MB/s card is no different!The card itself is sturdy, with no obvious flex and it fits perfectly in all of the devices I've used it in. This will take full HD video without issue from my full-frame DSLR and my smaller micro 4/3 system camera; in both cases I can take full res pics on continuous shooting (24 megapixel) for longer than I ever actually would and I never filled the buffer on either with JPEGs.Under computer speed tests I was able to transfer 1.52 GB video files in 1min 42 sec each to the card,read to my computer was little over 1 minute for files more than twice that size (3.07GB).The only reason I've given the card 4 stars instead of 5 is that write speed was only 2 sec quicker than on a SanDisk 30MB/s card and the 40MB/s was actually 1 sec slower to get the 3GB files off than the 30MB/s card in my read test. That said, my equipment is all over a year old and the very latest kit may be able to extract a little more performance from this card.So if you have the very latest cameras and readers (or are about to add them) you may well get a speed boost over last years' kit but if not, you can (at least in Nov 2014) save a couple of £ by getting the 30MB/s SanDisk card.
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3.8.2015

I bought this 16 GB SanDisk SDHC card to replace my old 2GB SD card in my Sony bridge camera, which I use a lot. From the first use I noticed how much quicker my camera was processing and saving photos, something that could be a bit slow when using my old card. Even when the card is carrying a lot of large files (18 mega-pixel photos) it still seems to be pretty speedy, which is excellent.There seem to be mixed opinions among reviewers about the "frustration free packaging". My card came loose on a cardboard envelope and I know some people didn't like this because the card could be damaged or lost. Personally I think that this is an improvement on the old plastic packaging that you seemed to need magical powers or a scalpel to break into!The enveloped is very secure and has an Amazon envelope surrounding it so there is no chance of the card being lost or damaged.Overall this card is a great purchase for people who want a card for storing files or using in a camera. If you're using it in a really high end DSLR camera or want film lots of videos then this should be fine but there is a faster version (SanDisk Extreme) available if speed is that important to you. :)
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11.11.2014

I tried this out in a reasonably high-end camera, and found it was perfect for even the highest resolution images it could take - snappy enough for burst shots too. So, absolutely no complaints there.However, it really should be pitched as a 'camera SD card' - for one thing, the capacity isn't high enough to make it useful for higher resolution video cameras (such as the 4K camera I have) although the speed is still fine for all the testing I did. The kind of resolutions you'll end up using in order to take advantage of the speed are sufficiently high that the 32GB capacity will be gobbled up sooner than you'd think. It's fine for a camera, not so fine for video footage. For use in a desktop,32GB is a little parsimonious these days regardless of the speed, which makes it rather niche.You can of course get higher capacity SD cards, but it's a strange combination to have such high speeds with relatively low storage. It really does limit how useful the card is. If it fits your requirements, I have no difficulty in recommending it though.
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9.5.2018

Don't think there's anything to say other than, SanDisk is one of the most reliable SD card manufacturers out there.If you're looking for reliable, well priced products than look no further.I own SanDisk SD, Multiple MicroSDs and 2 SSDs in my computer. Never had a failure in about 10 years of using their products.UPDATE:I've dropped the score by 1* because of the following line."Up to 80MB/sec read speed; write speed lower."This is quite misleading because the write speed is between 10-15mb/s and it doesn't state this on the product description (80 looks fantastic right?)I got this for photography and unfortunately taking RAW photos mean your pictures are 30mb each so this card doesn't quite live up to the standard when burst shooting 5-6 pictures.For general purpose,this fantastic but if you are going to need write speeds get a 32gb Sandisk Extreme which has 60mb/s write speed or extreme pro if you are doing high end photography/video work as those hit up to 85mb/s
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6.11.2014

Two years ago I spent three times as much on the 30 MB/S version of this card, which saw me fantastic use, joys for the march of technology bringing prices down. With this new card I can get about 15 or so good pictures on a burst mode (on a £600 camera) before it buffers and forces me to wait. The 40 MB/S read speed is definitely noticeable when trying to move large video files from the camera to a computer. The card itself is also pretty tough, it will take a bit of a battering without throwing it's teddies out the electronic pram.32GB of storage is LOADS for the average user, certainly I never filled up my old one with pictures alone. If you are taking lots of HD video then you may get to the edge,but for a 2/3 week holiday it is more than enough to snap to your hearts content.Recommended, it may seem expensive, but for an 'average joe' user (such as myself) it'll be a long time before you need to upgrade. Easily enough time to get your monies worth.
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21.8.2018

I regularly use two cameras. 1) Sony DSCRX100M5 that I have not yet reviewed but see: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sony-DSCRX100M5-Advanced-Digital-Tiltable/dp/B01M2ZWRHL/ref=sr_1_13?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1534868862&sr=1-13&keywords=sony+compact+digital+camera Please note that since I bought that model newer, enhanced, versions have become available BUT it is still a superb camera! 2) A Nikon D7200 with a large variety of lenses. So... why two cards? Quite simply because each card can record a very large number images (1000+ at the best resolution) that I got tired of moving one camera to another. The answer was to buy another one!See: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B014IX03CE/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o05_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1I read previous comments about 'dodgy' packing and counterfeit cards that I was a wee bitty worried about buying this card but I have to say that, so far, I have experienced no problems and would buy this SD memory card again.
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12.4.2018

I have learned some time ago that 32GB versions of the same card may greatly exceed U1 classification write speed, which is very lowly 10MB/s. U3 should should have write speed of 30MB/s. Well my 128GB has 75+MB/s sequential write speed which will easily handle any 4k compressed video recording in consumer grade cameras. 75MB/s is theoretically good for 600Mbit/s video bit rate recording (75x8). Most consumers' cameras top around 200Mbit/s for 4k recording. My five previous 32GB Sandisks Ultras U1 perform around 40MB/s and as high as 60MB/s write speed, only one is bit slower at around 20MB/s write. Therefore it might be bit of lottery, the cards may perform worse when filling up or with time but just now I feel like it is worth a risk.My Panasonic GX80 records 4k at 100Mbit/s so this card theoretically exceeds this by 6 times. I have no doubts at all that it will perform flawlessly recording high quality 4k with my GX80.
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