John Connor
Lifer
I use a netbook that is on 24/7 and one of its purposes is a Filezilla FTP server. The storage is on a 15 GB SD card. About every other week I write about 85 MBs to the SD card. How often should I replace this SD card with my use?
You can still re write the card like 200 times. They do work like a very cheap SSD so that still means you can write 3TB of data easily to the card.. It is why for cameras you buy expensive cards costing 5-10 times as much since they are SLC usually for high end cameras and cheaper MLC cards for small cameras which also cost 3-5 times as much. All other cheapo cards are TLC but they still work 100-500 rewrites easily, only problem is some dont have garbage collection and if you deleted stuff and write, it writes to very same area. So it is safer to move old files into a temp directory for storage and not actually erase the files. Then when the card gets full, format it again and use it. The cards will work a lot longer.. This is only for the very cheap cards without any things like block allocation and garbage collection type controllers. So you are manually doing wear leveling youself by hand. Hence why these cards dont work in cameras and fail in a few months or less as it keeps writign the picture data to the very same locations over and over instead of storing it all over the card memory.
You can still re write the card like 200 times.
Side note, I know a few people who have had their images on their cameras get corrupted, and since SD cards offer 0 way of informing people what is going on, when you finally notice it, it is too late to do anything about it.
Get new SD cards for your vacation pics is what I go by. 🙂
I don't think so. If that were true, all the SD cards in my various cameras would have been dead years ago.
I have heavily used SD cards that have to be at least five or six years old for digital photos and HD video, I can't recall a single failure. I would still have a backup, no matter how well they perform.