Story Details

  • Reverse-engineering and analysis of SanDisk High Endurance microSDXC card (2020)

    Posted: 2025-02-02 10:32:40

    The blog post details a teardown and analysis of a SanDisk High Endurance microSDXC card. The author physically de-caps the card to examine the controller and flash memory chips, identifying the controller as a SMI SM2703 and the NAND flash as likely Micron TLC. They then analyze the card's performance using various benchmarking tools, observing consistent write speeds around 30MB/s, significantly lower than the advertised 60MB/s. The author concludes that while the card may provide decent sustained write performance, the marketing claims are inflated and the "high endurance" aspect likely comes from over-provisioning rather than superior hardware. The post also speculates about the internal workings of the pSLC caching mechanism potentially responsible for the consistent write speeds.

    Summary of Comments ( 74 )
    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42907766

    Hacker News users discuss the intricacies of the SanDisk High Endurance card and the reverse-engineering process. Several commenters express admiration for the author's deep dive into the card's functionality, particularly the analysis of the wear-leveling algorithm and its pSLC mode. Some discuss the practical implications of the findings, including the limitations of endurance claims and the potential for data recovery even after the card is deemed "dead." One compelling exchange revolves around the trade-offs between endurance and capacity, and whether higher endurance necessitates lower overall storage. Another interesting thread explores the challenges of validating write endurance claims and the lack of standardized testing. A few commenters also share their own experiences with similar cards and offer additional insights into the complexities of flash memory technology.