

SanDisk Extreme PRO microSDXC UHS-II – SDSQXPJ-064G-ANCM3 SanDisk Extreme PLUS microSDHC UHS-I – SDSQXBG-032G-GN6MA SanDisk ExtremePro A1 – SDSQXCG-032G-GN6MA SanDisk Extreme UHS-I 64GB – SDSDQXL-064G-A46A SanDisk Extreme UHS-I 32GB – SDSDQXL-032G-A46A We are currently running the Lexar, Sandisk Extreme and Samsung EVO cards that are within the list. It’s important to use one of the recommended SD cards (or a similar/better spec card) in your camera, or you may experience freeze-up or video corruption issues.Īll of the cards listed below are fast and you’ll need fast and reliable if you are shooting at high resolutions.
#Gopro session walmart update#
GoPro issue a list of suitable cards and seem to update this on a fairly regular basis.

Lexar Professional micro SDHC memory card. I have purchased cards with greater capacity as I have incrementally upgraded my GoPro cameras. All my cards are also 32GB, 64GB or 128GB. All are more than capable of coping with all the recording options available on the GoPro. Over the last few months I have swapped out all of my cards for the newest Lexar 633x U1/U3 series. The higher the speed class the higher the price, the higher the card capacity the higher the prices.

The difficulty comes when you start looking at Speed Class and card storage size. When ever my GoPro has crashed or frozen it has always been down to the card I have been using. There is always a danger that if your SD card isn’t up to it that you could encounter error messages or loss of data. For the GoPro Hero 3, 3+, 4, Session 4, 5 or Session 5 a Class 10 SD card/U3 is the best choice regardless of what you are using it for. A Class 10 SD card is recommended when using Time-Lapse mode or photo every 0.5 seconds. GoPro recommend SDHC cards with a Class 4 rating or higher for the Hero 2. This is exactly what you are expecting a GoPro camera to do whilst filming video at high resolutions. The Speed Class is important for video mode or camcorders, as when recording video the device is actually saving a steady stream of data. Check the transfer rates – this is the key. It may simply not be labeled with the new U3 symbol. If your card is not U3 this doesn’t necessarily mean that it is not up to the job. U3 is pretty new and is a response to ensure that consumers can easily identify those cards with the highest transfer rates suitable for 4K/2K filming. This can be seen on cards as a number within a bucket/U. UHS sets a minimum transfer of data that the card is capable of in a similar way to the SD speed class. Ultra High Speed 1 – U1 is the same as Class 10 (10MB/s). Just to confuse things a little more there is also an Ultra High Speed (UHS) classification. This can be seen on cards as a number within a circle.
