New SD card standards could double speeds with move to PCIe 4.0

Daniel Sims

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Forward-looking: It's unclear when, but users could soon see SD cards with significantly faster transfer speeds due to new hardware specifications. A labeling system will also help manufacturers and consumers determine the right cards for various devices based on minimum performance.

The SD Association recently released the SD Express 9.1 specification, which defines newly upgraded standards for vendors manufacturing SD cards and supporting hardware. The new requirements include PCIe 4.0 and NVMe architectures, which could double maximum speeds to 2GB/s.

Additionally, the 9.1 specification introduces a new labeling system to indicate which speed class each device requires and what each SD Express card supports. The four tiers (pictured below) represent minimum read/write speeds ranging from 150MB/s (like SanDisk's recently announced 1.5TB card) to 600MB/s. Customers must check a product's packaging or instruction manual to ensure they use the right card for each device.

Speed isn't the only innovation the specification brings. The association also introduced multiple simultaneous data streams and methods to manage power and thermals.

Multi-stream support enables users to record and transfer multiple feeds onto an SD card if their total data rate doesn't exceed the card's speed class. The association predicts that video feeds from vehicles or surveillance systems will benefit the most from the new feature.

Also read: microSD and SD Card Buying Guide - Classes, Performance, What to Buy

Meanwhile, the new power and thermal management systems ensure cards avoid damage from excessive heat. Asus ROG Ally owners recently encountered this problem when the handheld gaming PC's SD card reader either throttled speeds or stopped working altogether due to overheating.

The first new countermeasure for the issue allows a card to tell a host device its preferred maximum power level based on its speed class and PCIe bus mode so the hardware doesn't devote too much energy to reading and transferring data. Secondly, SD cards under the 9.1 specification can deliver information on their unique thermal limits, which may vary due to differences in performance, structure, and materials. The data could help future devices provide optimal speeds while monitoring heat levels.

As the specs require new hardware, it will likely take time for SD cards and readers supporting the new speeds to reach the market. Afterward, the association plans to release specifications allowing transfer speeds up to 4GB/s.

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This is something that I've thought about since NVME SSDs became a big thing. I don't know what would be needed on the hardware end to male things both PCIe and backwards compatible but we have been seeing USB type-c used for things outside of USB for years now. It might take more work to implement it, but it would be awesome to migrate things over to PCIe like removable storage.
 
Why would you need and SD card when there's SSD 2230 that's smaller than the SD card and with much more performance.
 
This probably means nothing, no manufacturers moved on to UHS-III for example, or SD Express.

Things like the Steam Deck would actually benefit from the faster storage as well, ROG Ally, Nintendo Switch, none of them bothered.

We appear to be doomed to UHS-II for many more years.
 
High end cameras will get this.

I wouldn’t hold your breath on anything else any time soon.

Though a guaranteed 100 or 150 would be nice with the current 30 “HD video” class marking being so low.
 
Why would you need and SD card when there's SSD 2230 that's smaller than the SD card and with much more performance.
Perhaps because SD cards are....wait for it....REMOVABLE STORAGE.

Holy hell, what an amazing revelation. Who would have thought of that!?!
 
Perhaps because SD cards are....wait for it....REMOVABLE STORAGE.

Holy hell, what an amazing revelation. Who would have thought of that!?!
Wow, SD card are removable and SSD are not?! Oh, they are?! THAT'S A REAL SHOCKER!

Holy hell, what an amazing revelation. Who would have thought of that!?!
 
Wow, SD card are removable and SSD are not?! Oh, they are?! THAT'S A REAL SHOCKER!

Holy hell, what an amazing revelation. Who would have thought of that!?!
Do M.2 drives have an external interface?

No?

Then you have your answer. Or are you one of those people that insists that oculink is just as convenient as thunderbolt?
 
Oh, the cornerstone in storage technology - the external interface. Surely even your puny mind should comprehend that a plastic cover its the last detail if the manufacturers would want to use SSD this way.
But of course, you cant see manufactures use SSD's this way because they dont have the "external interface" firstly. Kindergarten logic.
 
Why would you need and SD card when there's SSD 2230 that's smaller than the SD card and with much more performance.
[…]
Wow, SD card are removable and SSD are not?! Oh, they are?! THAT'S A REAL SHOCKER!

Holy hell, what an amazing revelation. Who would have thought of that!?!

A SD card is just 2mm thick WITH external protection case; a 2230 SSD is “naked” 2.5x thicker. That is very important for mobile devices. Even so, I get your point. Instead of perfecting the 2230 standard to a thinner one with case, they spend their time with this because they earn money with it.
 
High end cameras will get this.

I wouldn’t hold your breath on anything else any time soon.

Though a guaranteed 100 or 150 would be nice with the current 30 “HD video” class marking being so low.
High End Cameras never got UHS-III or SD Express.

Explain why this would be any different? To help put this in context, UHS-3 released February 2017 (month before the Nintendo Switch released) and absolutely no devices support it out there.

UHS-3 goes all the way up to 600MB/s, SD Express goes way further, nothing supports either standard and they’ve been out for years now.
 
Double speed, 4x the price. Currently, high speed SD card prices are ridiculous when compared to a NVME SSD that runs circles around it. Also, I think the higher speed is going to fall apart because of thermals.
 
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