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SanDisk High Endurance 128GB — Built for 24/7 Recording

SanDisk High Endurance 128GB — Built for 24/7 Recording

SanDisk High Endurance 128GB — Why Endurance-Rated Cards Matter

Standard microSD cards are designed for occasional recording (camera bursts, drone flights, action-cam sessions) where the card sees write cycles intermittently. Dash cams and 24/7 security cameras write continuously — typically overwriting the oldest footage as the card fills — which puts dramatically more wear on the NAND than typical camera use. Endurance-rated cards are built specifically for this loop-recording duty cycle.

What "High Endurance" Actually Buys You

Per SanDisk's High Endurance product page, the 128 GB variant is rated for up to 20,000 hours of Full HD recording — substantially more than standard consumer microSD cards, which are rated for occasional-use duty cycles rather than continuous write. The cards carry temperature, shock, and water resistance ratings, plus SanDisk's standard 2-year limited warranty for this product line.

How It Differs from a Standard SanDisk Extreme

Attribute SanDisk Extreme (standard) SanDisk High Endurance
NAND target use Burst writes (camera, action cam) Continuous write (dash cam, security cam)
FHD recording hours rated Not specified for continuous duty Up to 20,000 hours (128 GB)
Speed class V30 / U3 / A2 V30 / U3
Read speed (rated) up to 190 MB/s up to 100 MB/s
Write speed (rated) up to 90 MB/s up to 40 MB/s
Warranty Limited lifetime (region-dependent) Limited 2-year

Specifications drawn from each card's official SanDisk product page. Note: SanDisk also sells a Max Endurance line for the heaviest 24/7 workloads; this product is the standard High Endurance tier.

Best-Fit Use Cases

  • Dash cams — virtually all consumer dash cams overwrite oldest footage to a loop file. Endurance-rated cards are designed for this exact write pattern
  • Home security cameras (Wyze, Tapo, Reolink, etc.) — same 24/7 loop-record duty cycle; user reports across dash-cam and security-cam communities consistently note longer service life on endurance cards versus standard cards in the same role
  • Body cameras / professional surveillance — heavier continuous-write duty; consider the Max Endurance tier rather than this product if recording is genuinely 24/7
  • Trail cameras / wildlife cameras — intermittent recording but in harsh environmental conditions where the temperature / shock / water resistance matters

What This Card Is NOT Ideal For

  • Phones using adoptable storage — this card does not carry the A2 application performance class rating, which matters for random-I/O when used as Android adopted storage; the SanDisk Extreme or Extreme Pro is better suited
  • Switch / Steam Deck game storage — endurance for video loop-record is irrelevant for read-heavy game-asset loads; standard or Extreme cards perform better here
  • Camera burst photography — slower write speed (40 MB/s rated) compared to standard high-tier cards (90 MB/s rated); affects buffer-clear time on cameras shooting raw bursts

Card Health and Replacement Cadence

Most dash cam and security cam manufacturers recommend periodic card replacement even for endurance-rated cards — typical guidance is to check footage integrity every 6-12 months and replace at any sign of corrupted file writes. Mighty Gadget's reliability comparison notes that endurance-tier SanDisk cards consistently outlast standard cards in 24/7 deployment, but no card is infinite under continuous-write duty.

Sources & Citations

  1. SanDisk, "High Endurance microSDXC product page," sandisk.com (accessed 2026-05-16)
  2. SanDisk, "Specialty Memory Cards for Dash Cams, Drones, and More," sandisk.com (accessed 2026-05-16)
  3. Mighty Gadget, "Reliability of microSD Endurance Cards Compared," mightygadget.com (accessed 2026-05-16)
  4. SD Association, "Speed Class Standards," sdcard.org (accessed 2026-05-16)

Last verified: 2026-05-16

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