Fujifilm

Fujifilm 04005322 High Professional C10 UHS-I SDHC Memory Card

4.5 (58 reviews)

UHS-I Class 10 speed meets professional-grade reliability for uninterrupted high-resolution capture in demanding photo and video workflows.

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Overview

The Fujifilm High Professional C10 UHS-I SDHC card targets professional photographers and videographers who need a reliable, high-speed storage medium that keeps pace with modern mirrorless and DSLR capture rates. The UHS-I interface bus delivers up to 104MB/s theoretical read throughput — the practical ceiling for a single-row SD card contact configuration. Class 10 certification guarantees the write floor at 10MB/s, ensuring the card can sustain 1080p video streams without frame drops on compliant recording devices. The SDHC specification limits capacity to 32GB, which means this card is positioned for session-based shooting where cards are regularly offloaded rather than used as long-term onboard archives.

In practice, this card fits cleanly into professional event, portrait, and travel photography workflows where a reliable Class 10 card is the workhorse in rotation. It also works as a dependable backup or B-roll card in dual-slot camera bodies. The Fujifilm High Professional designation signals quality-controlled NAND selection, which matters for write endurance over hundreds of format cycles in working professional use. Buyers who are bottlenecked by storage speed — shooting high-bitrate 4K video or continuous RAW bursts at 10+ fps — should evaluate whether UHS-I bus limits constrain their specific camera body, and consider UHS-II alternatives if sustained throughput above 100MB/s is required by their workflow.

Key Features

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Specifications

Card Type
SDHC
Speed Class
Class 10
Bus Interface
UHS-I
Capacity Range
SDHC (4GB–32GB)
Brand
Fujifilm
Model
04005322

Pros & Cons

👍 Pros

  • UHS-I interface delivers up to 104MB/s theoretical read bandwidth — sufficient for fast image import during post-production triage.
  • Class 10 minimum write guarantee ensures smooth 1080p video recording without dropped frames on compliant devices.
  • SDHC form factor is universally compatible with cameras, laptops, tablets, and card readers supporting the SD specification.
  • Professional-tier branding from Fujifilm implies reliability-focused NAND selection and quality control over consumer-grade alternatives.

👎 Cons

  • Fujifilm does not publish specific peak sequential read or write speeds for this card, making direct benchmark comparisons with competing cards difficult before purchase.
  • SDHC format caps capacity at 32GB maximum — workflows generating large RAW or ProRes files will require multiple cards or more frequent offloading.
  • UHS-I bus ceiling of ~104MB/s means this card cannot leverage the full throughput of UHS-II card readers or high-end mirrorless cameras.
  • No published waterproof, temperature, or shock resistance ratings are listed, making durability claims for field conditions unverifiable.

Frequently Asked Questions

UHS-I Class 10 guarantees a minimum sustained write speed of 10MB/s — sufficient for 1080p video and burst JPEG capture. The UHS Speed Class 1 (U1) rating underpins this floor; if the card carries a U3 rating it guarantees 30MB/s minimum for 4K video. Fujifilm's product listing does not publish peak sequential speeds for this model, so real-world benchmarks will vary by device and workload.
Yes, with a caveat. UHS-I cards are physically compatible with UHS-II slots and will operate correctly — but at UHS-I bus speeds (up to ~104MB/s theoretical), not UHS-II speeds (up to ~312MB/s). If your camera or reader has a UHS-II slot and your workflow demands maximum throughput, a UHS-II card will outperform this one.
SDHC covers 4GB to 32GB. The card uses FAT32 formatting by default, which is natively compatible with all SDHC-compatible cameras, printers, and card readers without reformatting.
It depends on the host camera's buffer and the card's sustained write speed. Class 10/UHS-I cards generally handle moderate burst rates in cameras with onboard buffers (10-15 RAW frames). High-speed burst cameras that drain the buffer rapidly will expose any write speed ceiling on this card — professional shooters relying on continuous 20+ frame bursts should verify the card's published write speed against their camera's buffer drain rate.