• Technology Reviews from TechnologyGuide.com
  • Desktop Reviews from DesktopReview.com
  • Digital Camera Reviews from DigitalCameraReview.com
  • Notebook Reviews from NotebookReview.com
  • Smartphone Reviews from Brighthand.com
  • Tablet Reviews from TabletPCReview.com
  • Printer Reviews from PrinterComparison.com
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter Sign Up
  • Forum Login
  • Media Kit
NotebookReview.com
  • HOME
  • REVIEWS
    • ALL REVIEWS
    • Notebook Reviews
    • Software Reviews
    • Ultrabook Reviews
    • TOP BRANDS
    • Acer Laptop Reviews
    • Dell Laptop Reviews
    • HP Laptop Reviews
    • Lenovo Laptop Reviews
    • Sony Laptop Reviews
    • RECENT REVIEWS
    • Alienware 17 Review
    • Alienware's latest 17-inch gaming notebook, now called the Alienware 17 boasts a redesigned exterior...

    • Lenovo IdeaPad Y500 Review
    • The Lenovo IdeaPad Y500 is an affordable gaming and media focused notebook. Keep reading to see if i...

    • BUSINESS REVIEWS
    • Lenovo IdeaPad Y500 Review
    • The Lenovo IdeaPad Y500 is an affordable gaming and media focused notebook. Keep reading to see if i...

    • Toshiba Satellite P875-S7102 Review
    • The Toshiba Satellite P875 is a desktop replacement mid-tier notebook with strong visuals and perfor...

  • NEWS
    • ALL NEWS
    • All Notebook News
    • Software News
    • Ultrabook News
    • News Archives
    • TOP CATEGORIES
    • Dell News
    • HP News
    • Lenovo News
    • Sony News
    • RECENT NEWS
    • VIDEO: Samsung ATIV Book 9 Ultrabook
    • Mike Wall gives us a close-up and full rundown of the 0.51" ATIV Book 9 Ultrabook.

    • Acer C7 Chromebook Now Available for $200 at Walmart
    • The Acer C710-2865 is now available at select Walmart retailers for $200 with a 16 GB SSD.

    • BUSINESS NEWS
    • Apple Launches OS X Mavericks
    • The new edition of Apple's OS X will feature new system tags, a tabbed finder, and improved support ...

    • Apple Unveils New MacBook Air Models, Now Available For Purchase
    • Apple shows off new MacBook Air models, with its 13-inch notebook sporting 12 hours of battery life....

  • SHOP
    • SHOP
    • Notebook Price Search
    • COMPARE
    • Student Notebooks
    • Business Notebooks
    • Home Notebooks
    • Multimedia Notebooks
    • Gaming Notebooks
    • POPULAR PRODUCTS
    • HP Pavilion g6
      J&R Music and Computer World $450.99Rakuten.com Shopping $445.99
      Lenovo G580
      MacMall $476.99
    • BUSINESS PRODUCTS
    • Lenovo ThinkPad T430
      Lenovo - Official Store $1079.10
    • ALL POPULAR LAPTOPS
  • COUPONS
    • ALL COUPONS
    • Dell Coupons
    • HP Coupons
    • Lenovo Coupons
    • Sony Coupons
    • Latitude 10
    • Inspiron 15
    • Inspiron 15z Ultrabook
    • Inspiron 14z Ultrabook
    • Inspiron 17R Special Edition
    • Inspiron 17R
    • Inspiron 14R
  • DEALS
    • ALL DEALS
    • Business Deals
    • Best Laptop Deals
    • Laptop Rebates
    • Sony Coupons
    • RECENT DEALS
    • Lenovo IdeaPad U410 Touch $250 off with coupon
    • $400 off Lenovo IdeaPad U510 with coupon
    • $500 off Lenovo IdeaPad Y410p with coupon
    • $510 off Lenovo IdeaPad Y500 with coupon
    • Lenovo Essential G780 $370 off with coupon
  • DISCUSSIONS
    • NOTEBOOK DISCUSSIONS
    • See All Notebook Forums
    • TOP FORUMS
    • What Notebook Should I Buy?
    • Notebook News and Reviews
    • HP Forum
    • Dell Forum
    • Acer Forum
    • RECENT DISCUSSION
    • » College Laptop Vaio Sa13 vs Envy 15 3200
    • » Thin/Light and capable of playing games - UK/Ireland - €2,000
    • » What Laptop Should I Buy?
    • » Need college laptop. Chrome OS or Windows? Needs to last about 5 years. Help!
  • ADD ONS
    • ALL ACCESSORIES
    • Accessory Reviews
    • Storage Reviews
    • Monitor Reviews
    • Mouse Reviews
    • Backpack Reviews
  • VIDEO
    • NOTEBOOK VIDEOS
    • View All Notebook Videos
    • RECENT NOTEBOOK VIDEOS
    • Sony VAIO Fit Review
    • HP Pavilion Sleekbook 15Z
    • Dell Latitude E5530 Notebook Video Preview
    • Dell Latitude Ultrabook 6430u Video Review
    • Dell Latitude 10 Education Tablet\/ Notebook
  • BUSINESS

SDHC Cards vs Hard Drive vs SSD

By Jerry Jackson, NotebookReview Editor | | 157667 Reads
Email this article Print Discuss      Tweet

by Jerry Jackson

Almost every modern notebook has a built-in memory card reader, but not everyone uses these card readers for digital photography. Now that SDHC memory cards offer larger capacities at low prices, is this a good option as a second storage drive, or even your primary boot disk? We did some testing to find out just how useful a $30-$100 memory card is for laptop owners.


One of the harsh realities of modern life is that we constantly need more storage space. Between software files, digital images, digital audio, and now digital video we just can't get by on a single 40GB hard drive anymore. But what if you don't feel comfortable opening up your laptop and removing the old hard drive? What if you don't like constantly plugging and unplugging external hard drives and flash drives into your laptop USB ports? Another option is to use the built-in SDHC card reader as a second internal storage drive.


(view large image)

Our editorial staff first stumbled onto the idea of using an SDHC card as a "permanent" second drive during our review of the Asus Eee PC. That subnotebook only includes a 4GB SSD (or rather built-in flash drive) and it just isn't enough room for most storage needs. That's when we realized a SDHC card could serve as a second drive for everything from files and applications to even the operating system.

As we tested these low-cost storage drives on multiple laptops in our offices we discovered some great reasons why you might want to buy an SDHC card for your notebook ... and some reasons why you might want to consider more traditional storage options.

Performance

In this review we tested several storage options both in terms of SDHC cards and traditional storage like Hard Disk Drives (HDDs) and Solid State Drives (SSDs). The two primary SDHC cards we used for our benchmarks were the 8GB Transcend SDHC card and the 16GB A-DATA SDHC card. Both cards are labeled as "class 6" which means they offer the fastest read/write times currently available for SDHC cards.

Below are standard ATTO disk performance benchmarks used to test the maximum read and write speeds for storage drives. We compared the 8GB Transcend SDHC ($31.99) and 16GB A-DATA SDHC ($64.99) against a 128GB Memoright SSD ($3,399) from DVNation. Granted, this is hardly a fair comparison, but it demonstrates the difference between using an SDHC card and a genuine SSD.

8GB Transcend SDHC:


(view large image)

16GB A-DATA SDHC:


(view large image)

128GB Memoright SSD:


(view large image)

The main point here is that both of the class 6 cards offer similar performance but the genuine SSD is so much faster they aren't even in the same league. Of course, what did you expect from a SDHC card when it's only a small fraction of the cost of a true SSD?

Next, we benchmarked the SDHC cards in both a Dell Inspiron notebook and an Asus Eee PC using HDTune. HDTune is the gold standard for drive benchmarking because it measures the consitency of the transfer rate (basically the read rate) and provides tha access time (the delay between when the computer tries to read data and when the data is available).

We also benchmarked a traditional 2.5" SATA 60GB hard drive (5,400 rpm) and a 32GB Memoright SSD ($999) from DVNation for comparison purposes.

8GB Transcend SDHC in Dell:


(view large image)

16GB A-DATA SDHC in Dell:


(view large image)

16GB A-DATA SDHC in Asus Eee PC:


(view large image)

60GB SATA (5,400 rpm) hard drive:


(view large image)

32GB Memoright SSD:


(view large image)

The most interesting item of note in these benchmarks is that the SDHC cards managed to deliver access times similar to that of a genuine SSD. This means the instant your computer needs to find data it is there.

The Limitations

One of the first clear limitations we encountered during our testing on multiple notebooks is that some laptops use slow built-in card readers. If your laptop isn't equipped with a high-speed built-in card reader then any SDHC card you use will run too slowly to be of any practical use as a second drive.

Below is an HDTune screenshot showing just how slow a typical SDHC card is when used inside the built-in card reader on a Fujitsu LifeBook E8410. Keep in mind the card being used in this test is a class 6 SDHC card ... one of the fastest cards available:


(view large image)

As you can see from the image above, the speed of the built-in card reader can be a serious bottleneck in the performance of the card.

Another common criticism of flash-based storage like SDHC cards is the lack of "wear leveling." Wear leveling is a technique used in SSDs for prolonging the lifespan of flash memory. Flash memory is limited by the number of times data can be written and erased to the medium. Wear-leveling works around this limitation by arranging data so that erasures and re-writes are distributed evenly across the medium. In this way, no single sector of the flash prematurely fails due to a high number of write cycles.

That sounds like an absolutely manditory thing to have in flash storage ... and luckily "high-performance" SDHC cards such as the 16GB A-DATA SDHC card and many other class 6 cards from other manufacturers incorportate wear-leveling.

For example, the 16GB A-DATA SDHC card has an estimated endurance or lifetime of 1,000,000 write cycles. What does that mean is "real world" terms? You would have to constantly write, erase and re-write data non-stop for several years before you need to be concerned about failure.

If your SDHC is 4GB with a formatted capacity of 3900MB, and you do nothing but write to it as fast as you can - at, say, 30MB/s - you'll still only be able to replace its entire contents every 130 seconds. At that rate, it'll take you 1,500 days (4.1 years) to hit 1,000,000 cycles.

In short, by the time you need to worry about SDHC failure we'll probably have 320GB SDHC cards or the computer industry will start using another type of storage medium. That said, every electronic device ever created can fail. We've had brand new hard drives and brand new SSDs fail in our office after less than a week of use. Bottom line, in most cases we don't believe using an SDHC card is any less safe than any other storage methods.


Conclusion

In the end, SDHC cards are a good option for people looking for cheap storage, but they aren't the best solution as primary drives. On one hand SDHC cards have extremely fast access times that even rival expensive SSD storage drives. On the other hand, data transfer (read/write) times are quite slow ... even by slow hard drive standards.

The bottom line is that using a fast class 6 card like the 16GB A-DATA SDHC card in your laptops's built-in card reader can make an excellent second storage drive, but it isn't a great idea as a primary storage drive unless you don't have any other options.

Pros:

  • SDHC cards offer cheap storage without the need to open up your laptop
  • Removable storage so you can take important applications with you
  • Fast SDHC cards have rapid data access times
  • Data transfer rates remain mostly constant

Cons:

  • Your notebook's built-in card reader might be too slow
  • Slower SDHC cards aren't really fast enough
  • Even a fast SDHC has slower transfer rates than most hard drives
  • Real SSDs are MUCH faster ... and MUCH more expensive

Email this article Print Discuss      Tweet
Most Recent News

VIDEO: Samsung ATIV Book 9 Ultrabook
Acer C7 Chromebook Now Available for $200 at Walmart
HP ElitePad 900 Productivity Jacket Review


Our Most Popular Notebook Reviews

  • Lenovo G580

    As low as $476.99

    G580
  • Dell Inspiron 15R Special Edition

    As low as $999.99

    Inspiron 15R Special Edition
  • Alienware 17

    As low as $3049.00

    17
  • HP ENVY X2

    As low as $699.99

    ENVY X2
  • Acer Aspire S7

    As low as $1186.99

    Aspire S7
Powered by Shopping.com

Partner Resources

  • Shop Sony Deals!
Dell Coupons

Featured Dell Business Deals
  • Technology Guide
  • Desktop Review
  • Digital Camera Review
  • Notebook review
  • BrightHand
  • TabletPCReview
  • Printer Comparison

TechTarget publishes more than 100 focused websites providing quick access to a deep store of news, advice and analysis about the technologies, products and processes crucial
to the jobs of IT pros.


TechTarget Corporate Web Site |  About Us |  Advertising |  Media Kit  |  Site Map |  Contact Us |  Submit Review |  RSS Feeds |  Jobs

All Rights Reserved, Copyright 2000 - 2013, TechTarget |  Read our Privacy Statement