Photo: Simon Hill
We like the other flash drives of choice
We have experienced many other USB flash drives who have not deducted. There are some who may be able to consider some people.
PNY Pro Elite V2 (256 GB) for PN 35: This sliding drive covers the plastic to protect the USB-A plug, and for a while we had a compact pick. He performed well in my tests (reading and writing speeds 415 MB/second and around 425 MB/second), and it has a lane yard or carving. I tested the 256-GB drive, but here are 512-GB and 1 Terrifybite model.
Sandesk Ultra Doyl Drive Go (128GB) $ 16: This easy drive is rotating the cours to give you USB-C or USB-A, and comes in different sizes and some entertainment colors, but low-capacity drives are slow (USB 3.1). You can get 128GB drive and USB 3.2 to read up to 400 MB/s in General 1 and this is a solid alternative to the above PNY pair.
PNY Elite-X (256 GB) for PNY 22: This super compact, sliding drive has a USB-C 3.2 general 1 jack and a loop that finally fits on a carving. He did the right thing but proved in my tests incredible (about 200 MB/S. Red, and 130 MB/S).
Kingston Ironic Capid 200 (16GB) in $ 100: If you need a safe drive, Kingston’s Ironi has been proud of the FIPS 140-3 certification, XTS-AES 256 bit encryption, and a special epoxy on its circulation to make it impossible to eliminate the components. On the negative side, it is expensive, the key is clean, and 10 wrong entries wipe the drive.
Samsung Fit Plus (256GB) in $ 23: It looks better than our best tiny drive pick, which is compared to metal body and performance (read for 128-GB or 256-GB drives up to 400 MB/s). But Samsung’s drive is also large and expensive, though it has an easy loop for kitchens.
Avoid these flash drives
Photo: Simon Hill
Silicon Power DS72 Portable SSD (1 TB): This is a reasonable price for a 1-TB drive that has USB 3.2 General 2 USB-A and USB-C connectors, and it permanently targets 450 MB/s reading and writing speed in my tests (it can hit 1050 MB/S and 850 MB/S with right gear). It was hot enough to contact, but because of this I do not recommend this drive, it is a stupid plastic connector cover. When you are trying to enter the drive, you have to turn them back, and they will be on the way.
Oral Dual (64 GB): This teen drive is cheap and it has both USB-A and USB-C plugs, but I found that the writing speed was variable (60 MB/s for USB-C and 90 MB/s for USB-A) and around 150 MB/s for reading speed. There is a cover for USB-A and a week of strap you can connect, but this drive is almost too small, and it proved strange to insert and remove it. It also comes in 16- or 32 gigabytes of options.
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