Headsets

Headsets

Computers

Computers

Laptops

Laptops

Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)
Vendor
Lexar

Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)

3.8
Regular price
€211,00
Sale price
€211,00
Regular price
€348,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€137,00)
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.

  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • High speed performance leverages UHS II technology (U3) for a read transfer speed up to 2000x (300MB/s)
  • Includes SD UHS II reader for high speed file transfer from card to computer, dramatically accelerating workflow
  • Captures high quality images and stunning 1080p full HD, 3D, and 4K video with a DSLR camera, HD camcorder, or 3D camera
  • Backwards compatible with UHS I devices

Shipping and Returns

  • We offer tracked shipping on all orders. Tracking information will be shared as soon as the order is dispatched.
  • Please check the delivery estimate before adding a product to the cart. This is displayed for every product on the website.
  • Available shipping methods and charges will be displayed at the time of checkout, depending on your exact location.
  • All customers are entitled to a return window of 14 days, starting from the date of delivery of the product(s).
  • Customers are advised to read our return policy for details of the return process, eligibility, refunds as well as cancellations or exchanges.
  • In case of any issues or concerns about Shipping or Returns, please contact us and we will be happy to help.

Customer Reviews

Don't waste your money! Steer clear of this card. The locking switch is loose and locks each and every time I put it in my camera making it useless. Lexar support told me to out a piece of tape over the switch. I could do that, but I am returning the card and going to use Sandisk cards. I have never had a problem with a Sandisk card. Also, the plastic near the gold pins is begining to pull away from the rest of the card.RMA state 14 to 21 business days....LOL...I send them the card and they take 14 to 21 business days to send me another one. Awful. Why not send me one and charge me, then reverse the charge once they recieve damaged product. Never again, Lexar, never again! 2High performance card, over 200mbps write speed for 4K pro res Excellent quality, high performance card from Lexar. I purchased this for the highly demanding Blackmagic 4K video assist. It wrote clean files at 4K Pro Res HQ which is well over 200mbps.This is one of the few cards that actually listed a write speed, which is why I purchased it. Lexar always makes fantastic cards, best value and performance.The Sandisk extreme card I purchased topped off at 150mbps which was not even close to my needs, ended up having dropped frames on clips in 1080p Pro Res HQ and lost a whole day of shooting.No problems with Lexar. I highly recommend it for pro video in HD and 4K 5COUNTERFEIT I recently ordered a Lexar Professional 64 GB memory card from this Amazon Listinghttps://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B00OD71FKU/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1and today I put it in the camera (Canon 5D Mark IV) to format it, and it wouldn't format. It's brand new, I thought, maybe if I put it in my computer first I could format it. The computer didn't recognize it either, using the in-computer card slot, nor via a Lexar Professional USB 3.0 card reader. Upon closer inspection, I determined I have gotten a counterfeit card. See the picture in the center, surrounded by legit cards What tells me it's a fake: The labels on the other cards are foil, this one is not.The label is skewed and not properly centered.The color of the yellow is off compared to the CF card I ordered a month before (lower left on the picture)The back of the questionable card is fully black and blank. The other 32GB cards I have printing on them.Uh, the card doesn't work at all...I'm contacting Amazon to get a replacement because it doesn't work.BEWARE OF FAKES! This one was sold by "Wafting International Inc"https://smile.amazon.com/sp?_encoding=UTF8&asin=&isAmazonFulfilled=1&isCBA=&marketplaceID=ATVPDKIKX0DER&orderID=113-2191870-5197062&seller=A21VBBG6OSU5D5&tab=&vasStoreID= 1Perfect for the D500 This is currently my favourite SD card by far. Previously I was using - as my workhorses - a combination of SanDisk Extremes & Extreme Pros, and Lexar 633xs. This is unsurprisingly far, far faster - both in off-loading photos, where the difference is most dramatic (4-6x faster than any UHS-I card), and in recording photos (and video).I must note that I haven't compared it first-hand with other UHS-II cards, because they're all far more expensive and by all reviews I've seen these Lexars are superior in performance.In a D500 this card makes a huge difference, given that the D500 can take advantage of UHS-II (at time of writing, August 2016, very few cameras can). Whereas your leading UHS-I cards will give you a buffer depth of maybe a few dozen photos, with the Lexar 2000x cards I'm struggling to recall ever over-running the buffer you can get at least sixty or so shots (at 10/s) without issue, probably more. And even if you're not relying on such long bursts, it's still surprisingly beneficial that the card clears shorter bursts super quickly, ensuring you can switch into review mode and look at photos you just took immediately thereafter - no delays, no pauses, nada. This might sound trivial, but it's actually one of the big draws to this card for 'normal' use - I didn't fully appreciate this myself until I got used to this card and then went back to a SanDisk Extreme Pro 95MB/s temporarily, and saw the stark difference in the responsiveness of the camera overall.Even in older camera bodies (that support only UHS-I) this card is still a tad quicker than any leading UHS-I cards (and I have used all of them - Sony, SanDisk, Transcend, Lexar, etc). Most significantly, it's far more reliable - while the camera might still fill its buffer and slow down, the buffer will clear as fast as possible, without fail. Many thousands of photos in this configuration and I've never seen this card cause so much as a split-second delay (beyond the camera's intrinsic limitations). Even the venerable SanDisk Extreme Pro 95MB/s cards, the best UHS-I cards you can get, don't achieve this level of reliability.The only downside, such that it is, is the price. At time of writing the price is, and has long been, roughly USD$100 (for the 64 GiB model). That's a huge jump above even the upper echelon of UHS-I cards, like the Lexar 633xs and SanDisk Extreme Pro 95MB/s'. I really want to get a whole bunch more of these cards myself - I only have a couple right now - but at that price unfortunately, no.A while back these cards were selling for USD$50, here on Amazon, which is when I bought them. At that price they're great value.P.S. There were issues with *some* of these cards in D500s, which appears to have been a faulty batch (or batches), early on. I expect those faulty cards will have been flushed from distribution by the time of my writing, and have no concerns about that issue specifically in buying these cards now. In any case, if you encounter the issue Lexar will replace the cards, without charge. I haven't seen the issue myself, though, even though my cards were purchased before the D500 compatibility issue was identified (and addressed) by Lexar. Again, not all copies of the cards were affected, even before Lexar fixed the problem permanently.P.P.S. Nikon released D500 firmware 1.02 to "fix" the Lexar 2000x issue (http://downloadcenter.nikonimglib.com/en/download/fw/191.html) - which is unnecessary given Lexar will replace any such faulty cards anyway. Furthermore, I warn *against* using that firmware, as its workaround is not good - it simply causes the camera to switch to UHS-I speeds if the error occurs, which, yes, will address the error and allow the camera to keep working, but will also completely neuter the card, performance-wise, and defeat the point of buying a pricey, high-performance card. Better to leave your D500 at the earlier firmware version, if you can, so you'll at least clearly know if you're hitting the issue, and can get the cards replaced. 5DOA and Fake The product when arrived is DOA (Dead on Arrival) and cannot be read or accessed through any card reader be it dedicated or on laptop.On closer inspection, vs my current owned Lexar 2000x 64GB, it is clearly a FAKE.Do be very careful on such products and now I have to spend money to send it back to Amazon Returns. The first time I am terribly disappointed shopping through amazon and this reminded me of the Youtube saga not long ago of someone ordering a Canon 1Dx MkII only to have a brick delivered to him. 1The fastest UHS-II SD card available; more speed than you need? The Lexar Professional 2000x UHS-II SD card is fast. In the included UHS-II reader it measured very close to its 300MB/s advertised read speed. To get that speed requires a device that supports UHS-II. The card is backwards compatible to operate in UHS-I devices, but will be limited to around 95MB/s in UHS-I mode. Very few cameras support UHS-II, so you might not need this card for your camera, but you can still take advantage of its fast download speed.Compare the following UHS-II cards measured in the included UHS-II reader (benchmarks using CrystalDiskMark v3.0.3, sequetial 1GB random data, results in MB/s)Lexar Professional 2000x 300MB/s UHS-II 32GB: 296.5 read / 272.6 writeSanDisk Extreme Pro 280MB/s UHS-II 32GB: 274.5 read / 226.9 writeToshiba Exceria Pro 260MB/s UHS-II 32GB: 260.5 read / 235.6 writeI also tested using other UHS-II readers (SanDisk Extreme Pro UHS-II reader, Kingston MobileLite G4 and Lexar SR2) but the included reader provided the fastest speeds.Benchmarks aside, what is its speed in actual use? Copying 4GB of RAW files (134 images) from the card to a SSD drive took about 16 seconds for ~250MB/s actual transfer rate. That is faster than mechanical hard drives can sustain.If your camera only supports UHS-I (and doesn't have the necessary UHS-II pins) then this card won't be notably faster than using a fast UHS-I card like the SanDisk Extreme Pro 95MB/s UHS-I card. To compare, both cards were tested using Nikon D5500 and D7200 cameras. These cameras are capable of high write speed but only support UHS-I. Both cards provided essentially the continuous shooting performance.To measure performance in UHS-I mode, the two cards were benchmarked in the Lexar Dual Slot USB 3.0 UHS-I card reader (both cards are functioning in UHS-I mode):Lexar Professional 2000x UHS-II 32GB: 94.6 read / 94.0 writeSanDisk Extreme Pro 95MB/s UHS-I 64GB: 97.3 read / 93.2 writeWhy would one choose this card?1. Fast download speed.2. If your camera supports UHS-II (Fuji XT-1, Samsung NX1, Olympus E-M5 II) and you want the fastest card. 5Fastest of all cards I own hands down so far. This is a review of the 32GB Lexar Professional UHS-II 300mb/s 2000x SDHC Memory Card.Summary Keeping this short and simple. Everyone is seeking memory cards fast enough to keep up with our high bandwidth Photo and Video devices. I have used several cards and this is hands down the best I have used. (Using in a Nikon D5500 and Sony HDR-CX360 camcorder.) In terms of cost, you get what you pay for. This card was actually not that much more money than any high speed reputable card available. Also, not a hiccup so far. Devices picked up the card right away.The only question I have is will this develop issues with my frequent use and hold up over time. Should this card give me problems or fail to perform ongoing properly, I will update this review.If you are buying this card, would highly recommend using the included card reader as this is the latest standard and capable of delivering the speeds of the card. If you need to buy another card reader, just make sure it is UHS-II standard and speeds should be similar.Here is a quick chart I put together covering various speeds with some of my other cards and taking into consideration use of various card readers.Benchmarks using SpeedOut v0.5 and Intel devils canyon I7 4790, 32GB Memory and Geforce 1080TI.Rosewill Internal USB 3.0 Card ReaderSandisk 16GB Extreme Pro rated at 95mb/s reads at 41.562 mb/s and writes at 36.995 mb/s.Sony 16gb Class 10 rated at 70mb/s reads at 41.034 mb/s and writes at 10.223 mb/s.Lexar Professional rated at 300mb/s reads at 41.288 mb/s and writes at 40.27 mb/s.ANKER USB 3.0 External Card ReaderSandisk 16GB Extreme Pro rated at 95mb/s reads at 87.642 mb/s and writes at 71.123 mb/s.Sony 16gb Class 10 rated at 70mb/s reads at 76.161 mb/s and writes at 10.458 mb/s.Lexar Professional rated at 300mb/s reads at 86.505 mb/s and writes at 85.324 mb/s.LEXAR External USB 3.0 Card Reader (Included with card.)Sandisk 16GB Extreme Pro rated at 95mb/s reads at 87.642 mb/s and writes at 66.006 mb/s.Sony 16gb Class 10 rated at 70mb/s reads at 75.301 mb/s and writes at 10.44 mb/s.Lexar Professional rated at 300mb/s reads at 255.754 mb/s and writes at 200mb/s.Hands OnCopying 4.88gb of video and files took 31 seconds and was on average between 100-200mb/s. 5Card can not be read Used this card for about 2 months and loved it, it was extremely fast. Then one day in the middle of shooting it randomly was saying my card could not be accessed. I tried to reformat it and it wouldn't let me, I even tried to clear it from my computer-nothing. Card can't be accessed at all. No idea how this happened in the middle of me shooting an important event. I knew I should have stuck with brands I knew better like SanDisk 1Performance in X-T2 I compared the performance between this card and a Lexar Professional 1000x 32GB SDHC USH-II/U3 card using my Fujifilm X-T2.I set the drive mode to 8 fps, shutter speed to 1/125, the image quality to RAW and saved to only 1 SD card. I then photographed a digital stopwatch for 25 seconds.The 1000x card got 23 shots at 8 fps, after which it slowed down to about 1.5 fps. In 25 seconds, I got a total of 55 frames.The 2000x card got 27 shots at 8 fps before slowing down to about 3.5 fps. In 25 seconds, I got 84 frames.The conclusion:The buffer in the camera is what determines the maximum number of frames you can get, at the maximum frame rate. After that, the card speed will determine how long it will take before you can shoot another full burst at the max frame rate. In the X-T2, the 2000x is about 52.7% faster than the 1000x. It is up to you to determine if this is worth the extra cost. 5Catastrophic Failures This is the SECOND time that I have had this exact model of card have a catastrophic failure and be completely unusable. The first time I ordered it from B and H and it arrived unable to be seen by my computer AND camera. It was returned to Lexar and replaced. Now, thinking that it was just a fluke, I purchased another one but went through Amazon this time. I went to a gig and when I got back, the card was unreadable by both my camera and my computers. Thank god I backed it up before I left the job site. DO NOT GET THIS CARD. Two different cards from two different suppliers from different batches should not be failing like this. 1
Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)

Lexar Professional 2000x 64 Gb Sdxc Uhs Ii Card (Lsd64 Gcbna2000 R)

3.8
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€211,00
Sale price
€211,00
Regular price
€348,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€137,00)