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Quality Concerns For Kingston microSD Cards

Andrew "bunnie" Huang, whom we've discussed before for his book on Xbox hacking and development of the Chumby, has made an interesting blog post about problems he's found with Kingston microSD cards. He first encountered a batch of bad cards during production of the ChumbyOne, and found Kingston initially unhelpful when trying to get them replaced. After noticing some unusual markings on the chips, he decided to investigate for himself, comparing the ID data and dissolving the cards' casings with nitric acid to take a look inside. He found that each of his Kingston-branded samples actually had a Toshiba/SanDisk memory chip inside, and that the batch of low-quality cards he received may not be as uncommon as he thought. "Significantly, Kingston is revealed as simply a vendor that re-marks other people's chips in its own packaging. Every Kingston card surprisingly had a SanDisk/Toshiba memory chip inside, and the only variance or 'value add' that could be found is in the selection of the controller chip. ... This tells me that Kingston must be crushed when it comes to margin, which may explain why irregular cards are finding their way into their supply chain. Kingston is also probably more willing to talk to smaller accounts like me because as a channel brand they can't compete against OEMs like Sandisk or Samsung for the biggest contracts from the likes of Nokia or RIMM. Effectively, Kingston is just a channel trader and is probably seen by SanDisk/Toshiba as a demand buffer for their production output. I also wouldn't be surprised if SanDisk/Toshiba was selling Kingston 'A-' grade parts, i.e., parts with slightly more defective sectors, but otherwise perfectly serviceable. As a result, Kingston plays a significant and important role in stabilizing microSD card prices and improving fab margins, but at some risk to their own brand image."

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  1. Re:Sandisk suck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I totally avoid buying sandisk products since my experiences with sandisk cruzer thumb drives at work.
    It doesn't tell you anywere on the packaging that it forces you into a totally horrible marketing idea....

    When you plug in a Sandisk Cruzer it appears as two drives. The first drive is a small read-only drive (presumably a rom) that is configured to auto-install unnecessary windows drivers and other miscellaneous bloatware every time you plug the usb drive in. You can't disable or hide this drive at all. The best you can do is turn off autorun in windows (which was always a crappy idea anyway). The drivers/utilities are totally redundant in that if you never install them you can still access the user drive as normal.

    Its particularly annoying of Sandisk to make a product that:
    a) just assumes you must be using windows.
    b) Under widnows, the lower drive letter is the ROM, not the user space.
    c) Its downright rude that it just auto-installs drivers with no user confirmation or control.

    You are a moron:

    A: The work fine in every OS I've ever tried them with

    B: You are worried about the drive letter enumeration here? are you kidding me?

    C: Windows auto installs the drivers. Not SanDisk

    D: The U3 feature can easily be turned off so the drive looks like any other cheaper flash drives.

    you sir need to RTFM before tou bitch about how bad something is you have no business commenting on.