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SanDisk Extreme PRO 128GB SDXC Memory Card up to 170MB/s

SanDisk Extreme PRO 128GB SDXC Memory Card up to 170MB/s

SanDisk Extreme PRO 128GB SDXC Memory Card up to 170MB/s, UHS-1, Class 10, U3, V3


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Legal Disclaimers

Not all devices support SDXC. Check with device manufacturer for more details.

* Up to 170MB/s read speeds, engineered with proprietary technology to reach speeds beyond UHS-I 104MB/s, require compatible devices capable of reaching such speeds. Performance may be lower depending on 1MB = 1,000,000 bytes. Write speed up to 90MB/s. Based on internal testing; performance may be lower depending upon host device, interface, usage conditions and other factors. 1MB=1,000,000 bytes. X = 150KB/sec.

**1GB=1,000,000,000 bytes. Actual user storage less.



Dimensions: 0.2 x 2.39 x 3.18 cm; 17.86 Grams
Model: SDSDXXY-128G-GN4IN
Batteries Included: 1 Lithium Ion batteries required.
Manufacture: SanDisk
Dimensions: 0.2 x 2.39 x 3.18 cm; 17.86 Grams

18 Responses

  1. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Attention all photography enthusiasts and Canon lovers, get ready to witness the perfect partnership of cutting-edge technology with the SanDisk Extreme PRO 128GB SDXC Memory Card and your Canon 5D Mark IV!

    Imagine this: your Canon 5D Mark IV, already a master of capturing stunning visuals, teaming up with a memory card that’s like a turbo boost for your camera’s performance. With up to 170MB/s read speed, this memory card is to your camera what jet fuel is to an airplane — pure power and exhilaration.

    Say goodbye to the frustration of waiting for your camera to process and save those high-resolution images. This memory card is like having a speed demon at your fingertips, ready to handle rapid-fire shots, burst modes, and 4K videos without missing a beat. It’s like turning your camera into a high-performance sports car on the racetrack of photography.

    Not only is this memory card blazingly fast, but it’s also incredibly reliable. With UHS-1, Class 10, U3, and V30 ratings, it’s like a trusty vault for your precious memories. You can confidently embark on your photography adventures, knowing that your shots are safely stored and ready for post-processing magic.

    And let’s talk capacity — 128GB means ample space to capture your creativity without constantly worrying about running out of storage. It’s like having a bottomless canvas for your imagination. Whether you’re capturing landscapes, portraits, or candid moments, this memory card will be your faithful companion.

    In summary, the SanDisk Extreme PRO 128GB SDXC Memory Card is the perfect dance partner for your Canon 5D Mark IV. It’s like enhancing the capabilities of an already exceptional camera to deliver mind-blowing results. This memory card is your ticket to unlocking the true potential of your photography skills and capturing moments that will last a lifetime.

    So go ahead, let your creativity soar and your camera’s capabilities shine with this powerful duo. From fast-paced action shots to breathtaking landscapes, the SanDisk Extreme PRO memory card will be there to preserve every pixel of your masterpiece. Get ready to be amazed by the artistry you can achieve!

  2. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I have used Sandisk for years and this was an upgrade to match a new camera – the card is brilliant. The packaging and shipping was excellent and the product arrived on time.

    I would recommend.

  3. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    Which is better the write speed of 170 or 200 mbs ? If it’s the 200 version of this card buy the 170 mps as in the advert.. you might be lucky to be sent the 200 mps one instead as I got sent. yeah great purchase and value for the money.. as I need a high speed card.

  4. SavannaBridges says:

     United Kingdom

    I had a slight glitch with this second day in with my Nikon D750, where I got an error message a few times. However, i think it was just a little dirt contamination on one of the connectors. Once cleaned it has performed very well indeed. Nice fast card and excellent storage capacity for the price.

  5. Kevin Danielsen says:

     United Kingdom

    It was a initially a bit to tight in my D40X SD card slot, where the exit spring would not eject it as it normally would. After about 10 insertions and thumbnail assisted extractions, it began to eject properly. It is now working fine.

  6. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    I shoot photos and video on a variation of cameras, sony A7IV, Lumix S5 etc. and found that these are perfect for recording videos at long lengths and capturing raw uncompressed photos as well.

    They read at 170MBS and write speed is just under 90MBS so quite fast for the price. Most DLSR or mirrorless cameras shoot video at 150mbs (18MBS), so there is plenty of speed. I have bought 4 of these and they are working great, no problems as of yet and seem to be quite reliable.

    A good thing to note is to make sure that you format the cards inside the device you are planning to use them in rather than the computer.

  7. LawrencE00 says:

     United Kingdom

    I’ve had some 32gb SanDisk Extreme Pro in regular use for 9 years. Never had a problem with card failure. So naturally I plumped for the 64GB version for my new camera, since 64GB seems to be the new normal. I bought two of these (camera has dual card slots) and although they haven’t seen much use yet, I’ve shot stills and video and they work as expected. By that I mean I can concentrate on using the camera and not have to worry about whether or not the card can keep up.

  8. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    The capacity and performance of the Standard Definition card is excellent. Worked fine in my Canon EOS m50 mark ii mirrorless camera.

    Sorry, what was that? SD does not stand for ‘Standard Definition’? What pray tell does it stand for? Do you know? Do you care? If you do, why are you only googling it after reading this useless review? You have until the movie I’m watching (Titanic) finishes to answer me. Oh yeah, that reminds me – this SD card can sink to Adobe products on my laptop very quickly due to its fast read write speeds…sorry, what was that? It’s not spelled ‘sink’!?

  9. MadieLassiter says:

     United Kingdom

    I once left one of these cards in a pocket and it went through a wash cycle. All the photos were intact – no errors.
    I have never had failure, and have bought a bunch of these over the last 15 years or so.

    NOTE: The features I have been asked to rate include “Picture Quality”, which is toally irrelevant for digital storage media – the quality would be the same on the cheapest, nastiest memory card you can buy. Either it works or it doesn’t work. Still, giving less than 5 stars might imply a problem. A better criterion would be “Reliability” which I would give 5 stars.

  10. Anonymous says:

     United Kingdom

    SanDisk Extreme sd’s at 64gig, bought these as a pair of backup cards for a camera as the real pair of Compact Flash cards in 64gig size are now quite expensive so bought two of these and two CF adaptors.

    What can you say ? Expect the usual SanDisk quality and value for money, always, high spec’s and they certainly do do what they claim. Absolutely no problem firing 8 or 9 frames-per-second in 4k (Nikon D4) always in RAW + JPG (two copies of each pic) and only really start to notice buffering after around 30/40 seconds with finger held down continually and then it’s actually not that bad in that it only starts to slow a little, maybe dropping to five to seven a second depending on lens settings iso etc. Never have had any issues with any SanDisk media ever, apart from once which was my fault being stupid and filling the USB too full and blocking it, and have always been happy with their products.

    Personally, I literally always (apart from one time) buy SanDisk when it comes to SD cards or USB keys and even have their multi card reader which is spot on sporting two CF ports plus others including SD and USB….perfect if you have two CFs which need reading yet you don’t really want to have to expose your camera’s firmware to the ‘net (kind of) directly through usual USB lead connection, also great to update firmware on camera for same reasons.

  11. Connie Guglielmo says:

     United Kingdom

    Managed to pick this up when it was on offer, wouldn’t normally have spent so much on an SD card but this has actually changed my mind. I use a canon 80d and a canon 7d mk3 and with previous cards when taking rapid shots would have to wait to view the photos or take the next burst. These are fast enough to keep up with the camera, I had previously thought it was just the camera being a bit slow but nope was the sd cards! These are well worth the money even at full price, if I ever break the two I have will definitely be buying them again.

  12. Cassity says:

     United Kingdom

    Great sd card, the best and most reliable your can buy for a dslr, yes it’s only 64GB,but its better to have a few of these cards than to have one that’s say 400GB+, as there’s more important photos and videos to lose if the sd card becomes corrupted or you lose it, and please remember to back up your storage.

    Transfer is also dependent of your equipment’s ability but this card seems to manage file transfers just fine, these are the only cards (this brand and speed) I go for when in need of replacements as they don’t let me down.

    Would definitely recommend.

  13. Josh Miller says:

     United Kingdom

    SD cards have various speed ratings and other categories. Ideally you need to match the card to the capabilities of your device, for example putting a slow card into a very fast device will mean that everything is very slow. Similarly, putting a fast card into a slow device will give you none of the benefits of the fast card and will probably just cost you more money for no added benefit. The situation then gets more complicated because different manufacturers’ models of cards with similar specifications behave differently in the same device.

    I was looking for an SDXC memory card for a Canon EOS 250D DSLR camera. This particular card was very well matched to the capabilities of this camera. Despite claiming to be 170 MB/s card, it actually performs at about 65.5MB/sec when recording 4K video, which is the most stressful task that the card is required to perform. Although this may seem slow, this is one of the fastest actual write speeds attainable within the EOS 250D. It is slightly out-paced by one of the Sony Professional cards, which is also available on Amazon.

    This card also comes with a serial number to restore lost data (deliberately obscured in my photos) and a small, hard-shell case.

    5.0 out of 5 stars Ideal for DSLR 📷

  14. MarshalWinkler says:

     United Kingdom

    After having trouble getting Transcend cards with the advertised capacity (many of them seem to be 120 GB/60 GB instead of 128 GB/64 GB despite being sold as such) I just waited for a SanDisk card to go on offer. I was originally going to just get the Extreme, but when the Extreme PRO goes down to a lower price than the former you haven’t really got anything to lose!

    Card arrived promptly. My only gripe with the packaging is that there doesn’t appear to be a simple way into the outer cardboard box: perforations would be nice! The inner packaging is excellent and the film peels cleanly off the plastic (made from recycled PET) in one piece.

    I then checked the capacity: 64 GB (59.4 GiB). Hurray! So far I haven’t had any SanDisk cards with incorrect capacity.

    Benchmarked it in CrystalDiskMark and as you can see in the screenshot it’s no slouch. I don’t have the SanDisk reader for the 170 MB/s read, but as you can see the write speed is very close to 90 MB/s which is another area where the SanDisk cards pull away from the budget cards.

    Overall, I wouldn’t buy these at full price, but when they’re on offer I’m happy to pay 3 more to not have to play the lottery on getting a proper capacity card from the cheaper brand, and the hassle of returning it when that happens (3 out of 4 purchases I had to return). I don’t think Transcend’s 500S cards suffer from the capacity misrepresentation, but then they cost the same as these so you might as well just buy SanDisk and not worry.

    5.0 out of 5 stars Very fast SD Card and great value if you get it on offer!

  15. Patrick Holland, says:

     United Kingdom

    Two years ago I bought a second generation Panasonic Bridge Camera FZ330 replacing my much loved FZ200. This new unit has many upgrades including weather and dust proofing and the ability to record 4k videos with the potential to record stills at 4k. The card I decided upon at purchase was a 64GB SanDisk Extreme Pro SDXC V30 U3 C10 writing at 95MB/s. At the time it was incredible however when the latest SanDisk Extreme Pro SDXC V30 U3 C10 with 170MB/s write speed came out, I determined to buy one. When it came to purchase time these 64GB Cards were amazingly lower priced at around 13.00 so I bought two. When shooting there is absolutely no delay in write speeds and can shoot in burst mode recording upto 30 frames a second. I shoot in Raw and also fine jpeg, so at 30 f/p/s I am recommending one set of Raw AND one set of JPEG, in effect 60 f/p/s with no lag or delay. The Raw shots are approx 16 no some at 18-20 no while the JPEG’s compress from 12mp to 8 to 10 MP. As a professional artist retired I used to be a Photoshop user working all over the world. I now use Affinity for both Raw and composition find this platform easy to work within and great value for money at single cost rather than subscription. The SanDisk Extreme Pro 170MB/s will from now on be my choice of memory card and with a range of 4500 quality shots per card is ideal for those trips abroad without sending back to my NAS drive at home every day. 192GB of record s with 13500 stills should be enough for even me.

  16. Stephen Slaybaugh says:

     United Kingdom

    I use Sandisk now excusively since Lexor were bought by a Chinese company and quality dropped significantly. price now for memory is incredibly cheap. I dont think I have ever filled a 64 gb card and have quite a few, but the price now of the 128gb card is so cheap I buy anyway , just in case . Stupid really unless taking 4K video, I’ll never use the memory and I take up to 2,000 photos a day if travelling, so would probably use 2 64gb cards instead anyway for safety changing at a suitable time during the day. Ive never had a sandisk card fail but so many photos even with large RAW file sizes can be stored on even the 64 gb card I would play safe. yet I own 3 128 gb cards as well, totally illogical on my part.

  17. Lorraine C. Ladish says:

     United Kingdom

    When it comes to removable storage I rely heavily on SanDisk quality. I use their Extreme Pro range in my Nikon DSLR camera due to the superior transfer rate for multi-burst shooting, and I use their Ultra range for everything else. When I’ve used Ultra cards in my camera I’ve noticed a bottleneck in data transfer when shooting continuous shots to the point where the camera stops taking photos. I’ve not yet experienced this with the Extreme Pro cards.

    I would recommend considering the Ultra range if your storage demands aren’t overly demanding though. Currently I have four 1080p IP security cameras each with 64GB Ultra cards installed, and three dash cams ( Nextbase 512 front and 112 rear in my car and 412 front in my wife’s) with 32GB Ultra cards. The transfer rates of the Ultras are still more than good enough to process HD video from all of these sources so the extra expense of using the Extreme Pro cards isn’t necessary.

    I’ve been using SanDisk cards for as long as I’ve been using digital devices and I’ve never lost any data in that time. I have no hesitation in recommending SanDisk memory cards, with the Ultra range offering exceptional value for money while the Extreme Pro range provides exceptional performance.

  18. TanishaGrooms says:

     United Kingdom

    Golden Review Award: 5 From Our UsersI’ve had two batches of two 32Gb with about 6 months between each purchase. In light of other reviews about speed and fraud, I did test with h2testw and SpeedOut with this last batch I had purchased in the past few days. The read and write speeds did not exceed 24MB/s. I was all ready to return to Amazon, but then decided to test my other cards – which also showed slow speeds and no-where near the 95MB/s suggested by Sandisk. I though that was odd because the earlier batch have been really good fast cards and not slowed my workflow at all.
    I then read up about testing and established the built-in SD card reader to my laptop and desktop may hinder the speed.
    I purchased the HAMA USB 3.1 type C card reader, which arrived the following day. Tested the new and old cards, and the speed – both burst and constant, read and write – was in excess of 80MB/s. Not quite that suggested by Sandisk, but what it did demonstrate to me as that testing is all very good but you must ensure that your hardware is not choking your speed…. it’s not all just about the cards, but also the bus speed and hardware.
    So be warned folks – don’t think you have a duff card based on one test.