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Review on πŸ’Ύ 64GB SanDisk Cruzer Fit Flash Drive USB 2.0 - SDCZ33-064G-G35 by Aneta Ogrodniczek ᠌

Revainrating 3 out of 5

Nothing unusual, normal product.

This is a reasonable option if your only intention is to read the purchased files. if you're a passenger in the car solely for the tunes. That's also normal for the person installing the equipment, however the recording process takes forever before yielding an accurate reading. I don't even know how to rate it; it's not a one because you can live with it, but it's not a five because speed kills. I can't even decide how to rate it. If you flip the flash drive over, you won't see any plastic, which means the case is only on the top and sides; nevertheless, this is irrelevant because the connector is metal. The plastic covering the flash drive is only visible when it is upside down. Database revision 1.27, item 0781, serial number 5571. It seems that only seldom can it be fixed in iflash. As an added bonus, I'd like to clarify that a flash drive is not a storage medium but rather a means of transferring information. Don't even think about trying to save anything important on the flash disks you use. Don't forget that the first regulation set by the administrator is "make backup copies!" I plan to keep writing till the end. Version 3.0.3(c) of Crystaldiskmark, 2022. One megabyte per second (mb/s) and three hundred megabytes per second (sata/300) are some of the abbreviations used in the crystal dew world. In a read-only operation, the speed is 22.685 MB/s, while the write-only speed is 4.033 MB/s. I didn't have the nerve to hold off any longer, to be honest with you.

Pros
  • USB 2.0 allows for a reasonable pace of 22.4 megabytes per second while reading large amounts of data. The cost is comparable to that of similar goods from other retailers. Due to the one-piece connecting and slight amount of plastic involved, the case cannot be rolled on a knee. excellent work: An element of metal serves as the connection. lack of plastic; glossy and matte plastics are used for the body, with a smooth transition along the device's edges. A working indication is hidden on the inside of the gadget, out of sight, and protected by a layer of translucent orange plastic. It slides into the recess with little resistance, and once there, it stays put. a metal strap loop and a retailer's guarantee good for five years (although the official website only lists a two-year warranty at this time). To facilitate its removal without a strap, the casing features hooks for nails or fingers. Nothing happens to make my sample warm. The complete flash drive has held numerous tiny files and a couple large ones without overheating once during my recording sessions. As a test, I began transferring a modest amount of data, and even though there is no heating, the process took roughly 14 hours to complete. If there's heating, it's important to know what sort; everyone who's ever tried to solder a USB connector knows that it needs to be warmed for an extremely long period, and exactly around the base of the leg, but that won't change the status of the mother chip. If there is heating, you'll want to consider what sort; everyone who has ever soldered knows that the process requires 4.8 volts at 0.7a (flash drives that are 2-3 times faster eat 02022a)
Cons
  • velocity of the recording. In 2022, when I buy a flash drive, I expect to get at least some of the theoretical maximum speed, but here, the write speed is extremely slow at 3.8-4.2 MB/s (not synthetics, but stupid copying of a real movie). As compared to the nearby 3–5 year old flash drives that still provide out 7–8 mb of storage space, the performance of the 4-year-old stump's 3.8 and the 4-core core with 16 GB of RAM and an SSD is really discouraging. When using either fat32 or ntfs, the results are identical. When I record with a file manager and watch the speed in real time, I often see that it would record for a few seconds, then freeze for a second, and then record a piece of the file again, making an already bad situation even worse. All through the recording, this keeps happening (this is not on other flash drives and microsd). Although there are no classes in horror movies, the experience is identical to that of a microSD card of class 10, which provides 6-7 mb/sec. It takes an unusually lengthy time to copy movies onto a flash drive. By the way, the situation is the same for the competition; buying a USB 3.0 flash drive is the only choice because the prices are comparable and the drives are almost always backwards compatible with USB 2.0; however, this is not an option for diagnostic or installation software. It's not easy to interpret the operation's status indicator. It blinks when you stick it, disappears when you browse the directories, and fails to make a good copy by first blinking fast and then going dark. Simply said, you shouldn't waste your time looking at it. The strap's loop is quite tiny and sharp, thus inserting the strap tore the fabric away and revealed the fishing line beneath. This is because as the strap is adjusted, the fishing line disappears (but the loop is probably attached to the body itself). That they didn't include a penny strap in the package that contained this trivial item is beyond comprehension. It's too little to try to pull out without a strap, so pushing it into the mother from behind will save you the trouble of disassembling everything around you. But, without a strap, such a trifle poses a significant risk of damage if it were to fall out.