SanDisk Extreme Pro 256GB DJI Bundle — Drone Use-Case Guidance
The SanDisk Extreme Pro 256GB microSDXC is one of the most widely deployed cards in consumer drone use. The 256 GB capacity is well-matched to DJI's recommended card sizes for 4K/60 fps drone recording, and the V30 / U3 / A2 speed-class ratings meet or exceed the requirements DJI publishes for each of its current consumer drone families.
DJI Drone Compatibility
| Drone | Max video mode | Compatible? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| DJI Mini 2 / Mini 2 SE | 4K30 @ 100 Mbps | Yes | Meets recommended speed class; 256 GB holds roughly 5+ hours of 4K30 |
| DJI Mini 3 / Mini 3 Pro | 4K30 @ 150 Mbps | Yes | Comfortably within speed-class window |
| DJI Mini 4 Pro | 4K100 @ 150 Mbps | Yes | V30 minimum sustained write covers the bitrate |
| DJI Air 2S | 5.4K30 @ 150 Mbps | Yes | Listed on DJI's compatibility page for the Air 2S family |
| DJI Air 3 | 4K100 @ 150 Mbps | Yes | Same speed-class window |
| DJI Mavic 3 / 3 Pro / 3 Cine | 5.1K50 / 4K120 @ 200 Mbps (H.265) | Yes for non-Cine modes | Cine variant's ProRes mode requires high-end UHS-I or UHS-II cards — check DJI's per-mode card recommendations |
| DJI Avata / Avata 2 | 4K60 @ 150 Mbps | Yes | Within speed-class window |
| DJI FPV | 4K60 @ 120 Mbps | Yes | Within speed-class window |
Card compatibility and recommended speed classes drawn from DJI's per-product specifications pages and the DJI Support knowledge base. Always verify the exact published recommended card list on the DJI product page before purchasing for a specific drone.
What V30 Means for Drone Video
The V30 marking guarantees a minimum 30 MB/s sustained sequential write — the SD Association's defined threshold for most 4K video formats per the Speed Class specifications. Drone bitrates above ~240 Mbps (e.g., Mavic 3 Cine ProRes) exceed the V30 threshold and require V60 or V90 cards from a different product tier.
Practical Capacity Math for Drone Pilots
At 256 GB capacity, this card holds approximately:
- ~4-5 hours of 4K30 H.265 footage at 150 Mbps
- ~3-4 hours of 4K60 H.265 footage at 150 Mbps
- ~7+ hours of 1080p60 footage at 100 Mbps
- ~12,000+ 24 MP raw photos from a DJI camera
Most drone pilots cycle through several flight sessions on a single card before offloading. The 256 GB tier sits at a sweet spot — large enough for multi-day shoots without offloading, small enough to keep card costs reasonable for the recommended "rotate two cards" workflow.
Why Two Cards Is the Recommended Drone Workflow
Two-card rotation is the consensus best-practice across drone-pilot communities and DJI's own published guidance for professional use:
- Reduces single-point-of-failure risk — if one card corrupts mid-flight, the previous flight's footage is on the offline card
- Enables overlap between offload and next flight — one card transferring to the workstation while the other is in the drone
- Limits per-card write cycles — drone footage written to a card always overwrites the same card-side LBA range when reformatted, so rotating cards distributes the wear
Sources & Citations
- SanDisk, "Extreme Pro microSDXC UHS-I product page," sandisk.com (accessed 2026-05-16)
- DJI, "Support & Product Compatibility," dji.com (accessed 2026-05-16)
- SD Association, "Speed Class Standards," sdcard.org (accessed 2026-05-16)
Last verified: 2026-05-16
