I see 1-Star reviews being posted for this same card. Take the time to assure BEFORE you Click "Add to Cart" that your source is "SOLD BY SANDISK, FULFILLED BY AMAZON." BUY FROM OTHER SOURCES AND YOU MAY GET BURNED*
I have four uses for a card like this:
1) Storage for an HP Photo Frame
2) Storage in a Nikon D40 DSLR
3) Storage in a Panasonic Video Camera which shoots H.264 video and writes to a mini-DVD or an SD-Card.
4) Moving images between devices.
I want to get this review published ASAP to save others looking for SD and SDHC cards some time. So, I am going to focus on #2 above and edit the review for points 1,3, and 4 above after I use the card in the other devices.
This card arrived quickly (Fulfillment by Amazon, sold by SanDisk + Prime Membership)! I ordered two of them, because ordering individual cards was a little less expensive than ordering them in pairs or quads (go figure???).
*The reason I wanted to get this review quickly published is because I wanted to help stop others from WASTING HOURS reading negative reviews about cards sold by other vendors that were maybe knock-offs, not the same as the picture, SDHC cards substituted for SD cards, etc. Simply look for "Sold by SanDisk" "Fulfilled by Amazon" in the product description BEFORE clicking "Add to Cart."
Hope in the future that Amazon punishes vendors who ship inferior, counterfeit, or products different than described or pictured. Right now, the only way I see to determine if this might be the case is to S L O W L Y read the 1 and 2 Star reviews for a product. Four or maybe even two years ago, you could comfortably make a purchase based on 4-Stars or above. No more - especially on these commodity products where confusion exists regarding product specifications. [On this product alone: SD vs. SDXC vs. SDHC; Suitability of Capacity; Choice of writing speed for application. For in-depth information see SDCard dot ORG] An overall rating is NO LONGER a sufficient criterion for a purchasing decision since many of these commodity type products have their reviews gamed by paid reviewers.
Anyway - just as I was about to order this same card bundled in a two pack, I saw the link for "38 sellers offer this product" and clicked the link. Huzzah - here was the same card, less expensive, and SOLD from the MANUFACTURER, SanDisk! The worries about getting a product other than described or represented was eliminated! This product was coming directly from SanDisk and was fulfilled by Amazon.
Shipment was quick, and frustration free packaging meant the product was in my hand about 30 seconds after I retrieved that package.
2) I put it in the camera, and the Nikon D40 immediately formatted the card and it was ready for use. The information screen said that it was ready to hold 2.2K (2200) pictures. I held down the shutter in continuous mode, and fired off about 20 seconds of pictures (the D40 shoots somewhere around 3 or 3.3 pics per second in burst mode). There was no stutter, lag, etc. when writing to the card. This SDHC card (remember different format than SD, which was the format available when I bought the camera) worked flawlessly in this little test. I buy only SanDisk or Lexar products, and I can say that media from neither company has ever let me down. The two Lexar cards have stored downloaded and erased around 72K pictures over six years, generally at 300-500 pics per download/erase/format cycle and are still going strong with the original capacity intact.
The warranty information enclosed with this SanDisk SDHC product indicates a 5 year warranty in the United States. Warranty periods may be different in other countries.
These cards are each pre-packed in a certified Frustration Free Packaging (FFP) mailer labelled Amazon/SanDisk (No. 80-56-10641), and then shipped in a bubble wrap envelope which was 11.25" x 9". The bubble envelope seemed too big, but perhaps that size was necessary to accommodate the huge shipping label. I will post some pictures of the package and card.
There is NO Cardholder Plastic Case, so you will need to supply your own keeper.
--------------------------------EDIT UPDATE for Points 1 & 4 Above 11/14/2013--------------------------------
1) The card worked flawlessly in a Hewlett-Packard Digital Frame (both versions DF1010v1 and DF1010p1).
Hewlett Packard - HP DF1010P1 10.1in LCD Digital Photo Frame, 16:10 Aspect Ratio, 800x480 Resolution, Clock, Calendar Display, Dark Espresso Wood
4) Write speed is very quick from PC to this card. Bursts of over 30 MB/s with an average around 10-15 MB/s. Faster than the Cruzer Flash Drives
SanDisk Cruzer Fit 16 GB x2 = 32GB USB Flash Drive SDCZ33-016G-B35-2PK w/ Everything But Stromboli (TM) Lanyard
I reviewed elsewhere, but the utility of this SDHC card for moving files is limited by equipment that does not have a built-in card reader.
3) Will update for Panasonic CamCorder soon.
SanDisk 8GB Class 4 SDHC Memory Card - Frustration-Free Packaging
Currently unavailable.
We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock.
We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock.
| Brand | SanDisk |
| Flash Memory Type | SDHC |
| Color | Blue |
| Secure Digital Association Speed Class | Class 4 |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 8 GB |
About this item
- Make sure this fits by entering your model number.
- Cards include security feature for protection of copyrighted data
- SD cards are fully compatible with all SD-compliant devices
- Speed performance rating: Class 4 (based on SD 2.0 Specification)
- Writeable label for easy identification and organization
- Ships in Certified Frustration-Free Packaging
- High quality and reliability backed by a 5-year limited warranty
This fits your .
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
Customers also viewed these products
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
Have a question?
Find answers in product info, Q&As, reviews
Your question might be answered by sellers, manufacturers, or customers who bought this product.
Please make sure that you are posting in the form of a question.
Please enter a question.
Product information
| Product Dimensions | 0.18 x 5 x 7 inches |
|---|---|
| Item Weight | 0.64 ounces |
| ASIN | B007JRB0TC |
| Item model number | SDSDB-008G-AFFP |
| Customer Reviews |
4.6 out of 5 stars |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | April 1, 2012 |
| Manufacturer | SanDisk |
Feedback
Customer reviews
4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
2,110 global ratings
How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2013
I have four uses for a card like this:
1) Storage for an HP Photo Frame
2) Storage in a Nikon D40 DSLR
3) Storage in a Panasonic Video Camera which shoots H.264 video and writes to a mini-DVD or an SD-Card.
4) Moving images between devices.
I want to get this review published ASAP to save others looking for SD and SDHC cards some time. So, I am going to focus on #2 above and edit the review for points 1,3, and 4 above after I use the card in the other devices.
This card arrived quickly (Fulfillment by Amazon, sold by SanDisk + Prime Membership)! I ordered two of them, because ordering individual cards was a little less expensive than ordering them in pairs or quads (go figure???).
*The reason I wanted to get this review quickly published is because I wanted to help stop others from WASTING HOURS reading negative reviews about cards sold by other vendors that were maybe knock-offs, not the same as the picture, SDHC cards substituted for SD cards, etc. Simply look for "Sold by SanDisk" "Fulfilled by Amazon" in the product description BEFORE clicking "Add to Cart."
Hope in the future that Amazon punishes vendors who ship inferior, counterfeit, or products different than described or pictured. Right now, the only way I see to determine if this might be the case is to S L O W L Y read the 1 and 2 Star reviews for a product. Four or maybe even two years ago, you could comfortably make a purchase based on 4-Stars or above. No more - especially on these commodity products where confusion exists regarding product specifications. [On this product alone: SD vs. SDXC vs. SDHC; Suitability of Capacity; Choice of writing speed for application. For in-depth information see SDCard dot ORG] An overall rating is NO LONGER a sufficient criterion for a purchasing decision since many of these commodity type products have their reviews gamed by paid reviewers.
Anyway - just as I was about to order this same card bundled in a two pack, I saw the link for "38 sellers offer this product" and clicked the link. Huzzah - here was the same card, less expensive, and SOLD from the MANUFACTURER, SanDisk! The worries about getting a product other than described or represented was eliminated! This product was coming directly from SanDisk and was fulfilled by Amazon.
Shipment was quick, and frustration free packaging meant the product was in my hand about 30 seconds after I retrieved that package.
2) I put it in the camera, and the Nikon D40 immediately formatted the card and it was ready for use. The information screen said that it was ready to hold 2.2K (2200) pictures. I held down the shutter in continuous mode, and fired off about 20 seconds of pictures (the D40 shoots somewhere around 3 or 3.3 pics per second in burst mode). There was no stutter, lag, etc. when writing to the card. This SDHC card (remember different format than SD, which was the format available when I bought the camera) worked flawlessly in this little test. I buy only SanDisk or Lexar products, and I can say that media from neither company has ever let me down. The two Lexar cards have stored downloaded and erased around 72K pictures over six years, generally at 300-500 pics per download/erase/format cycle and are still going strong with the original capacity intact.
The warranty information enclosed with this SanDisk SDHC product indicates a 5 year warranty in the United States. Warranty periods may be different in other countries.
These cards are each pre-packed in a certified Frustration Free Packaging (FFP) mailer labelled Amazon/SanDisk (No. 80-56-10641), and then shipped in a bubble wrap envelope which was 11.25" x 9". The bubble envelope seemed too big, but perhaps that size was necessary to accommodate the huge shipping label. I will post some pictures of the package and card.
There is NO Cardholder Plastic Case, so you will need to supply your own keeper.
--------------------------------EDIT UPDATE for Points 1 & 4 Above 11/14/2013--------------------------------
1) The card worked flawlessly in a Hewlett-Packard Digital Frame (both versions DF1010v1 and DF1010p1).
[[ASIN:B0058D2AQ6 Hewlett Packard - HP DF1010P1 10.1in LCD Digital Photo Frame, 16:10 Aspect Ratio, 800x480 Resolution, Clock, Calendar Display, Dark Espresso Wood]]
4) Write speed is very quick from PC to this card. Bursts of over 30 MB/s with an average around 10-15 MB/s. Faster than the Cruzer Flash Drives [[ASIN:B00DTZA5S0 SanDisk Cruzer Fit 16 GB x2 = 32GB USB Flash Drive SDCZ33-016G-B35-2PK w/ Everything But Stromboli (TM) Lanyard]] I reviewed elsewhere, but the utility of this SDHC card for moving files is limited by equipment that does not have a built-in card reader.
3) Will update for Panasonic CamCorder soon.
Verified Purchase
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Key to 5-Star Happiness is: SOLD BY SanDisk / Fulfilled by Amazon
By Keith R. Douglas on November 13, 2013
I see 1-Star reviews being posted for this same card. Take the time to assure BEFORE you Click "Add to Cart" that your source is "SOLD BY SANDISK, FULFILLED BY AMAZON." BUY FROM OTHER SOURCES AND YOU MAY GET BURNED*By Keith R. Douglas on November 13, 2013
I have four uses for a card like this:
1) Storage for an HP Photo Frame
2) Storage in a Nikon D40 DSLR
3) Storage in a Panasonic Video Camera which shoots H.264 video and writes to a mini-DVD or an SD-Card.
4) Moving images between devices.
I want to get this review published ASAP to save others looking for SD and SDHC cards some time. So, I am going to focus on #2 above and edit the review for points 1,3, and 4 above after I use the card in the other devices.
This card arrived quickly (Fulfillment by Amazon, sold by SanDisk + Prime Membership)! I ordered two of them, because ordering individual cards was a little less expensive than ordering them in pairs or quads (go figure???).
*The reason I wanted to get this review quickly published is because I wanted to help stop others from WASTING HOURS reading negative reviews about cards sold by other vendors that were maybe knock-offs, not the same as the picture, SDHC cards substituted for SD cards, etc. Simply look for "Sold by SanDisk" "Fulfilled by Amazon" in the product description BEFORE clicking "Add to Cart."
Hope in the future that Amazon punishes vendors who ship inferior, counterfeit, or products different than described or pictured. Right now, the only way I see to determine if this might be the case is to S L O W L Y read the 1 and 2 Star reviews for a product. Four or maybe even two years ago, you could comfortably make a purchase based on 4-Stars or above. No more - especially on these commodity products where confusion exists regarding product specifications. [On this product alone: SD vs. SDXC vs. SDHC; Suitability of Capacity; Choice of writing speed for application. For in-depth information see SDCard dot ORG] An overall rating is NO LONGER a sufficient criterion for a purchasing decision since many of these commodity type products have their reviews gamed by paid reviewers.
Anyway - just as I was about to order this same card bundled in a two pack, I saw the link for "38 sellers offer this product" and clicked the link. Huzzah - here was the same card, less expensive, and SOLD from the MANUFACTURER, SanDisk! The worries about getting a product other than described or represented was eliminated! This product was coming directly from SanDisk and was fulfilled by Amazon.
Shipment was quick, and frustration free packaging meant the product was in my hand about 30 seconds after I retrieved that package.
2) I put it in the camera, and the Nikon D40 immediately formatted the card and it was ready for use. The information screen said that it was ready to hold 2.2K (2200) pictures. I held down the shutter in continuous mode, and fired off about 20 seconds of pictures (the D40 shoots somewhere around 3 or 3.3 pics per second in burst mode). There was no stutter, lag, etc. when writing to the card. This SDHC card (remember different format than SD, which was the format available when I bought the camera) worked flawlessly in this little test. I buy only SanDisk or Lexar products, and I can say that media from neither company has ever let me down. The two Lexar cards have stored downloaded and erased around 72K pictures over six years, generally at 300-500 pics per download/erase/format cycle and are still going strong with the original capacity intact.
The warranty information enclosed with this SanDisk SDHC product indicates a 5 year warranty in the United States. Warranty periods may be different in other countries.
These cards are each pre-packed in a certified Frustration Free Packaging (FFP) mailer labelled Amazon/SanDisk (No. 80-56-10641), and then shipped in a bubble wrap envelope which was 11.25" x 9". The bubble envelope seemed too big, but perhaps that size was necessary to accommodate the huge shipping label. I will post some pictures of the package and card.
There is NO Cardholder Plastic Case, so you will need to supply your own keeper.
--------------------------------EDIT UPDATE for Points 1 & 4 Above 11/14/2013--------------------------------
1) The card worked flawlessly in a Hewlett-Packard Digital Frame (both versions DF1010v1 and DF1010p1).
[[ASIN:B0058D2AQ6 Hewlett Packard - HP DF1010P1 10.1in LCD Digital Photo Frame, 16:10 Aspect Ratio, 800x480 Resolution, Clock, Calendar Display, Dark Espresso Wood]]
4) Write speed is very quick from PC to this card. Bursts of over 30 MB/s with an average around 10-15 MB/s. Faster than the Cruzer Flash Drives [[ASIN:B00DTZA5S0 SanDisk Cruzer Fit 16 GB x2 = 32GB USB Flash Drive SDCZ33-016G-B35-2PK w/ Everything But Stromboli (TM) Lanyard]] I reviewed elsewhere, but the utility of this SDHC card for moving files is limited by equipment that does not have a built-in card reader.
3) Will update for Panasonic CamCorder soon.
Images in this review
124 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2015
Verified Purchase
Great card for the money. Used this for a digital picture frame from Amazon. Read times being fast was important to me, since I'd be clicking through 1,000 pictures fast with my frame remote.
This card did not disappoint. For picture frames, don't forget you can and should resize your photos before you load them onto the card, your photos are going to be upwards of 8 megapixels most likely, but your frame is probably lucky to go as high as 1024x768. A 3MP camera takes photos of 2048x1536, so even the cheapest camera takes bigger pictures than most frame can display. Also, huge photo files may take your frame extra long to load and then correct aspect ratio.
So if you're looking at this for loading up a ton of large pictures, you probably don't need a big size, each of your pictures should be under 1MB if you resized properly. I recommend FastStone Photo Resizer 3.2, it's free, works on Windows 7 and does batch resizing.
This card so far has been reliable and fast, definitely recommend for any purpose.
This card did not disappoint. For picture frames, don't forget you can and should resize your photos before you load them onto the card, your photos are going to be upwards of 8 megapixels most likely, but your frame is probably lucky to go as high as 1024x768. A 3MP camera takes photos of 2048x1536, so even the cheapest camera takes bigger pictures than most frame can display. Also, huge photo files may take your frame extra long to load and then correct aspect ratio.
So if you're looking at this for loading up a ton of large pictures, you probably don't need a big size, each of your pictures should be under 1MB if you resized properly. I recommend FastStone Photo Resizer 3.2, it's free, works on Windows 7 and does batch resizing.
This card so far has been reliable and fast, definitely recommend for any purpose.
2 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2019
Verified Purchase
Back when I bought this, memory cards were something relatively new. It was worth the purchase and the quality was what I needed at the time. Several years later, I've acquired a stack of memory cards that I basically have no use for. Everything is shared cloud-wise now. Not saying that memory cards don't serve a purpose anymore, as they most certainly do, but what I am saying is that there's more variety out there and depending upon what you are using these memory cards for, this one may or may not meet your needs.
Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2014
Verified Purchase
I bought this card for use in a Raspberry Pi, and it did see a lot of being removed and being inserted, mostly between my iMac and the Pi. This caused quite a bit of wear and tear, and seeing how this card is made from fairly brittle plastic, a small hairline crack eventually formed on the top where the connectors meet. This caused the card to be pushed away from the connectors inside the raspberry Pi's SD card slot, making it unable to be read unless I physically held the card firmly against the connectors.
Overall the cost hit the spot, and you get what you pay for, but seeing as Sandisk does not make any other SD cards out of materials better suited for constant removal/insertion, this is pretty much the only option. I recommend the Samsung SD cards, as they seem to be a bit less fragile. However, if you're just looking for an SD card that's gonna stay put, this is fine.
tl;dr Didn't fit with my lifestyle of obsessively pulling it out and putting it back in, ended up broken. Buy a card made out of sturdier material, like a Samsung.
Overall the cost hit the spot, and you get what you pay for, but seeing as Sandisk does not make any other SD cards out of materials better suited for constant removal/insertion, this is pretty much the only option. I recommend the Samsung SD cards, as they seem to be a bit less fragile. However, if you're just looking for an SD card that's gonna stay put, this is fine.
tl;dr Didn't fit with my lifestyle of obsessively pulling it out and putting it back in, ended up broken. Buy a card made out of sturdier material, like a Samsung.
Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2013
Verified Purchase
I purchased this based on reviews. It WAS NOT as easy as 1 2 3 . I suppose if you took your memory card out of your camera and stuck it in I might work fine , in a perfect world. HOWEVER, I used scanned photos - manipulated photos w/ photoshop,I designed art work as jpegs and for whatever reason SOME of the images would not show on the screen. The ones not able to view had NO common size, all were jpegs and yet they appeared as a black screen with the international NO symbol. What a pain in the neck. I had to have someone take a look at it and he was able to resave the photos in a photo program and upload them again - and still we do not know why some display and some do not. And the instructions included are not helpful. I would not buy this one again. I will say that the pictures that did display had nice resolution to them even tho I had scanned some very old photographs, the picture quality was fine, that's why I gave it a 3 star. Ease of working with it - I'd give a 1 star.
Featured items you may like
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
















