---
product_id: 1328785
title: "32GB SDHC Class 10 Flash Memory Card Up to 30MB/s (TS32GSDHC10), Blue"
brand: "transcend"
price: "€ 43.85"
currency: EUR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
category: "Transcend"
url: https://www.desertcart.pt/products/1328785-32gb-sdhc-class-10-flash-memory-card-up-to-30mb
store_origin: PT
region: Portugal
---

# Class 10 speed up to 30MB/s 32GB storage capacity Built-in ECC error correction 32GB SDHC Class 10 Flash Memory Card Up to 30MB/s (TS32GSDHC10), Blue

**Brand:** transcend
**Price:** € 43.85
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 💼 Elevate your digital arsenal with Transcend’s powerhouse SD card — because your memories deserve premium speed and reliability.

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** 32GB SDHC Class 10 Flash Memory Card Up to 30MB/s (TS32GSDHC10), Blue by transcend
- **How much does it cost?** € 43.85 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.pt](https://www.desertcart.pt/products/1328785-32gb-sdhc-class-10-flash-memory-card-up-to-30mb)

## Best For

- transcend enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted transcend brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Error-Free Transfers:** Built-in ECC technology automatically detects and fixes data errors for rock-solid reliability.
- • **Massive 32GB Storage:** Store thousands of HD photos & hours of Full HD video without compromise.
- • **Blazing Class 10 Speed:** Up to 30MB/s transfer rate keeps your workflow smooth and lag-free.
- • **Bonus Recovery Software:** Free RecoveRx download ensures your precious files are never truly lost.
- • **Universal Compatibility:** Works seamlessly with all SDHC devices—perfect for cameras, camcorders, and automotive media players.

## Overview

The Transcend 32GB SDHC Class 10 Flash Memory Card delivers high-capacity storage with ultra-fast 30MB/s transfer speeds, ideal for professional-grade HD photography and Full HD video recording. Featuring built-in error correction (ECC) for data integrity and broad compatibility with SDHC devices, it’s a trusted choice for millennial professionals seeking dependable performance and seamless media management. Backed by a limited lifetime warranty and free recovery software, this card ensures your digital content stays safe and accessible.

## Description

As high-tech gadgets become increasingly advanced with ever-improving video and audio quality, Transcend find themselves needing extra speed and memory capacity to store the high-resolution digital masterpieces.Adhering to the Class 10 specification, Transcend's SDHC cards perform at a transfer rate up to 20 MB/s on devices supporting SD 3.0, ensuring your device remains quick and responsive while recording and viewing files.The SDHC Class 10 series offer larger-volume data storage and optimized recording performance with support for FAT 32 file formats. With massive capacity storage, you can store your entire music or picture collection on today's high-megapixel digital cameras, HDTV digital video cameras, PDAs and other memory-hungry devices

Review: Great, Above spec. Pay no attention to the 1 stars - The 1-star threads are like watching a committee of blind men describing an elephant. Unsurprisingly, no one has the complete picture, but a lot of Canon owners think these cards are bogus. SD card technology is very complex, the Class system is often misunderstood, and there is a long history of compromised cards appearing on eBay -- or even from reputable dealers who have been hoodwinked. Kingston cards are most often faked (or taken from the midnight production run); that's because Kingston has about a third of the flash card market and doesn't forge their own chips, but any manufacturer can be spoofed. It doesn't pay to buy cheap cards on eBay or less reputable sources. An SD card contains a controller chip and flash memory chips, even the microSD versions. Realize that SD means Secure Digital, and that security comes from crypto managed by the controller (MMC cards didn't have that bloat, but Hollywood DRM requirements made sure they faded.) The controller can be pretty powerful: the Samsung SD controller is a 32-bit ARM TDMI chip with 128 k of code space -- that's cell phone power. It handles I/O and fading (when the card slowly wears out its NAND sites after about 100,000 hits so writing is randomly distributed and kept track of), the factory self-test, and a host of other functions, but it can also be programmed to report a false storage capacity. Sometimes the firmware on the controller or its crypto or something else on certain cards leads to problems with certain hardware, as it has, for example, with the Samsung Galaxy III and maybe the Canon cameras. Usually the card is found to confirm to SDcard dot Org specifications and the hardware is to blame, but you never know. To test the actual capacity of your card, use H2testw, which is free. It writes the full amount of data to the card and then reads it back (this nukes whatever was on the card). This can take more than an hour with a 32 GB card but it tells you if the card indeed holds 32 GB or has problems. It also gives you read and write speed numbers, but it's unclear whether the numbers are for random read/write, or sequential read/write. Sequential write is what photographers and videographers care most about. Sometimes a Class 6 card might test faster than a Class 10 card, when using computer read/write tests or even in a camera that wasn't designed with higher capacity cards in mind. That's because they use smaller block sizes (there's no cache on an SD card). Explaining the significance of this is getting too far into the weeds for an desertcart review, and modern devices and their firmware should not have that limitation. To test random and sequential read/write speed, use CrystalDiskMark, also free. Run the full suite; it won't take long. CrystalDiskMark requires that the card be formatted, and the most reliable way to do that is to use the free tool from sdcard dot org. A 32 GB card will may report 39.9 GB before formatting and 29.8 GB after; don't worry, you haven't been ripped off. Unfortunately, there's no easy way to read the manufacturer's ID off the SD card, even in Linux, to determine who actually made the card, because you have to have it connected directly to a motherboard; an SD-to-USB adapter won't work because it doesn't pass through disk data, and that's what's in nearly all computers. But what do you care, so long as the card's as big and fast as claimed? Now, what about the Transcend 32 GB SDHC C10 card? Here are full test results from CrystalDiskMark: Transcend 32 GB SDHC C10 ----------------------------------------------------------------------- CrystalDiskMark 3.0.2 (C) 2007-2013 hiyohiyo Crystal Dew World : [...] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- * MB/s = 1,000,000 byte/s [SATA/300 = 300,000,000 byte/s] Sequential Read : 19.953 MB/s Sequential Write : 13.786 MB/s Random Read 512KB : 19.618 MB/s Random Write 512KB : 13.827 MB/s Random Read 4KB (QD=1) : 3.003 MB/s [ 733.2 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=1) : 1.414 MB/s [ 345.1 IOPS] Random Read 4KB (QD=32) : 3.491 MB/s [ 852.3 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=32) : 1.842 MB/s [ 449.8 IOPS] Test : 50 MB [F: 0.0% (0.0/29.3 GB)] (x5) Date : 2013/05/12 18:19:47 So you can see that the sequential write speed, what matters to a photographer or videographer, is over 13 MB/s, more than 30% above the C10 spec. The other speeds aren't to shabby, either. There's no way that this card is too slow for a contemporary camera, still or video, that is functioning properly. Also on desertcart for a very attractive price is a Sony 32 MB SD card. Here are the full CrystalDiskMark test results for it: Sony 32 GB SDHS USH-I Sequential Read : 19.998 MB/s Sequential Write : 14.115 MB/s Random Read 512KB : 19.772 MB/s Random Write 512KB : 13.173 MB/s Random Read 4KB (QD=1) : 3.682 MB/s [ 899.0 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=1) : 2.302 MB/s [ 561.9 IOPS] Random Read 4KB (QD=32) : 4.517 MB/s [ 1102.8 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=32) : 2.323 MB/s [ 567.0 IOPS] So the Sony is slightly faster, 40% over spec. H2testw also reported full capacity and no errors for this card, so they are both top notch (The Sony doesn't come with a little case and the case for the Transcend case is about twice as big as it needs to be and so won't fit in the little pockets in a modern camera bag. Big deals.) Just for reference, here are the results for a contemporary USB thumb drive: SanDisk Ultra 32 GB USB thumb drive Sequential Read : 22.508 MB/s Sequential Write : 7.985 MB/s Random Read 512KB : 22.365 MB/s Random Write 512KB : 1.767 MB/s Random Read 4KB (QD=1) : 3.719 MB/s [ 908.1 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=1) : 0.520 MB/s [ 126.9 IOPS] Random Read 4KB (QD=32) : 3.871 MB/s [ 945.0 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=32) : 0.482 MB/s [ 117.7 IOPS] As you can see, this USB drive is faster than the SD cards for reading, such as playing music, running software, or looking up data, which shows that it is nicely optimized for its intended functions. As an aside, anyone who thinks they have lost data on an SD card can recover pictures using the free tool at z-a-recovery or recover everything(!) with the free PhotoRec tools. So, if people want to whine about these SD cards in their particular cameras, they should run these simple, free tests and reach their own conclusions about whether the cards are "too slow." The cards test above spec objectively. And they both work flawlessly on my still (not Canon) and video cameras. I think they have gotten a bad rap here from people who don't have the full picture, so to speak. I'll also post this as a review, and on the Sony 32 GB page, too. I hope you found it informative.
Review: Good choice for automotive media players. - This works very well for my application, which is in a 2015 Dodge Durango SD slot (UConnect 8.4N RA4). Many car SD card slots are limited to cards formatted with the FAT32 filesystem, and the maximum size of a card formatted with FAT32 is (as the name implies) 32GB, so for a lot of cars, this is the best you'll get without some luck and or/hacking. Many also list a maximum speed "class" of 8, but selection of those is pretty slim and usually far more expensive these days. Oftentimes, Class 10 will work just fine. I've owned several Transcend products, from flash drives to SD cards to an SSD, and I've never had a single issue. Flash memory is inherently stable, of course, but Transcend has yet to let me down. I use their flash memory in my phone, car, and computers. Sure, you could spend more, but really, flash memory is made in two factories, that's it. Both make good products, and you'll get the same thing no matter what the label is, as long as it is a recognized name brand and not a nonbranded knockoff which often uses far smaller capacity chips than listed. Transcend offers great value and a recognized name. With Class 10 speeds, the card ceases to be a bottleneck like they were years ago. YOu may notice it takes some time to completely fill the card with ~30GB of data, but that's to be expected with SD currently.It certainly won't slow down reading of music or writing of photos from the camera. Fully Class 10 compliant, Transcend’s Premium SDXC/SDHC Class 10 Cards help improve camera response with ultra-fast read speeds of up to 30MB per second. This outstanding performance is ideal for capturing high-resolution photographs and flawless Full HD videos.Transcend's SDXC/SDHC Class 10 Series memory cards come in a wide range of capacities from 8GB to 128GB to fit your storage needs. Whether you have a simple point and shoot or a high-end DSLR, they are the perfect everyday SDHC card to have during all occasions. The versatile SDXC/SDHC Class 10 cards support the latest Class 10 compliant cameras and camcorders, and are also backward compatible with any devices below Class 10. To improve post production efficiency, maximize the transfer rate by pairing the SDHC card with Transcend's USB 3.0 RDF8 Card Reader to achieve a speed of up to 22MB/s. With a purchase of Transcend’s SDXC/SDHC Class 10 memory cards, you can download RecoveRx software for free. This user-friendly application allows you to conduct an in-depth search within your storage device for traces of erased files to be recovered.

## Features

- Built-in error correction(ECC) automatically detects and fixes transfer errors
- Perfect for vast amounts of HD video and high-resolution images
- Compatible with all SDHC-labeled host devices (not compatible with standard SD)

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B003P3MCXW |
| Additional Features | Class 10 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #169 in SecureDigital Memory Cards |
| Brand | Transcend |
| Color | Blue |
| Compatible Devices | Camera |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 46,023 Reviews |
| Flash Memory Type | SDHC |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00163120468157, 00760557818373, 07038557113372 |
| Hardware Connectivity | SDHC |
| Item Weight | 2 Grams |
| Manufacturer | Transcend Information |
| Media Speed | 30MB/s |
| Memory Storage Capacity | 32 GB |
| Model Name | FBA_TS32GSDHC10 |
| Model Number | TS32GSDHC10 |
| Secure Digital Association Speed Class | Class 10 |
| UPC | 803983009080 887599401001 885782164856 809390015225 885782164948 163120468157 971472628583 760557818373 887529335291 778890846526 808112768746 617297056414 999994698792 806296584282 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | Limited Lifetime Warranty |
| Warranty Type | Limited |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** Transcend
- **Model Name:** FBA_TS32GSDHC10
- **Flash Memory Type:** SDHC
- **Memory Storage Capacity:** 32 GB
- **Compatible Devices:** Camera

## Images

![32GB SDHC Class 10 Flash Memory Card Up to 30MB/s (TS32GSDHC10), Blue - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/514Q6Uwq-lL.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Customer Package Type, Size, Style** options.

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great, Above spec. Pay no attention to the 1 stars
*by T***K on May 13, 2013*

The 1-star threads are like watching a committee of blind men describing an elephant. Unsurprisingly, no one has the complete picture, but a lot of Canon owners think these cards are bogus. SD card technology is very complex, the Class system is often misunderstood, and there is a long history of compromised cards appearing on eBay -- or even from reputable dealers who have been hoodwinked. Kingston cards are most often faked (or taken from the midnight production run); that's because Kingston has about a third of the flash card market and doesn't forge their own chips, but any manufacturer can be spoofed. It doesn't pay to buy cheap cards on eBay or less reputable sources. An SD card contains a controller chip and flash memory chips, even the microSD versions. Realize that SD means Secure Digital, and that security comes from crypto managed by the controller (MMC cards didn't have that bloat, but Hollywood DRM requirements made sure they faded.) The controller can be pretty powerful: the Samsung SD controller is a 32-bit ARM TDMI chip with 128 k of code space -- that's cell phone power. It handles I/O and fading (when the card slowly wears out its NAND sites after about 100,000 hits so writing is randomly distributed and kept track of), the factory self-test, and a host of other functions, but it can also be programmed to report a false storage capacity. Sometimes the firmware on the controller or its crypto or something else on certain cards leads to problems with certain hardware, as it has, for example, with the Samsung Galaxy III and maybe the Canon cameras. Usually the card is found to confirm to SDcard dot Org specifications and the hardware is to blame, but you never know. To test the actual capacity of your card, use H2testw, which is free. It writes the full amount of data to the card and then reads it back (this nukes whatever was on the card). This can take more than an hour with a 32 GB card but it tells you if the card indeed holds 32 GB or has problems. It also gives you read and write speed numbers, but it's unclear whether the numbers are for random read/write, or sequential read/write. Sequential write is what photographers and videographers care most about. Sometimes a Class 6 card might test faster than a Class 10 card, when using computer read/write tests or even in a camera that wasn't designed with higher capacity cards in mind. That's because they use smaller block sizes (there's no cache on an SD card). Explaining the significance of this is getting too far into the weeds for an Amazon review, and modern devices and their firmware should not have that limitation. To test random and sequential read/write speed, use CrystalDiskMark, also free. Run the full suite; it won't take long. CrystalDiskMark requires that the card be formatted, and the most reliable way to do that is to use the free tool from sdcard dot org. A 32 GB card will may report 39.9 GB before formatting and 29.8 GB after; don't worry, you haven't been ripped off. Unfortunately, there's no easy way to read the manufacturer's ID off the SD card, even in Linux, to determine who actually made the card, because you have to have it connected directly to a motherboard; an SD-to-USB adapter won't work because it doesn't pass through disk data, and that's what's in nearly all computers. But what do you care, so long as the card's as big and fast as claimed? Now, what about the Transcend 32 GB SDHC C10 card? Here are full test results from CrystalDiskMark: Transcend 32 GB SDHC C10 ----------------------------------------------------------------------- CrystalDiskMark 3.0.2 (C) 2007-2013 hiyohiyo Crystal Dew World : [...] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- * MB/s = 1,000,000 byte/s [SATA/300 = 300,000,000 byte/s] Sequential Read : 19.953 MB/s Sequential Write : 13.786 MB/s Random Read 512KB : 19.618 MB/s Random Write 512KB : 13.827 MB/s Random Read 4KB (QD=1) : 3.003 MB/s [ 733.2 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=1) : 1.414 MB/s [ 345.1 IOPS] Random Read 4KB (QD=32) : 3.491 MB/s [ 852.3 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=32) : 1.842 MB/s [ 449.8 IOPS] Test : 50 MB [F: 0.0% (0.0/29.3 GB)] (x5) Date : 2013/05/12 18:19:47 So you can see that the sequential write speed, what matters to a photographer or videographer, is over 13 MB/s, more than 30% above the C10 spec. The other speeds aren't to shabby, either. There's no way that this card is too slow for a contemporary camera, still or video, that is functioning properly. Also on Amazon for a very attractive price is a Sony 32 MB SD card. Here are the full CrystalDiskMark test results for it: Sony 32 GB SDHS USH-I Sequential Read : 19.998 MB/s Sequential Write : 14.115 MB/s Random Read 512KB : 19.772 MB/s Random Write 512KB : 13.173 MB/s Random Read 4KB (QD=1) : 3.682 MB/s [ 899.0 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=1) : 2.302 MB/s [ 561.9 IOPS] Random Read 4KB (QD=32) : 4.517 MB/s [ 1102.8 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=32) : 2.323 MB/s [ 567.0 IOPS] So the Sony is slightly faster, 40% over spec. H2testw also reported full capacity and no errors for this card, so they are both top notch (The Sony doesn't come with a little case and the case for the Transcend case is about twice as big as it needs to be and so won't fit in the little pockets in a modern camera bag. Big deals.) Just for reference, here are the results for a contemporary USB thumb drive: SanDisk Ultra 32 GB USB thumb drive Sequential Read : 22.508 MB/s Sequential Write : 7.985 MB/s Random Read 512KB : 22.365 MB/s Random Write 512KB : 1.767 MB/s Random Read 4KB (QD=1) : 3.719 MB/s [ 908.1 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=1) : 0.520 MB/s [ 126.9 IOPS] Random Read 4KB (QD=32) : 3.871 MB/s [ 945.0 IOPS] Random Write 4KB (QD=32) : 0.482 MB/s [ 117.7 IOPS] As you can see, this USB drive is faster than the SD cards for reading, such as playing music, running software, or looking up data, which shows that it is nicely optimized for its intended functions. As an aside, anyone who thinks they have lost data on an SD card can recover pictures using the free tool at z-a-recovery or recover everything(!) with the free PhotoRec tools. So, if people want to whine about these SD cards in their particular cameras, they should run these simple, free tests and reach their own conclusions about whether the cards are "too slow." The cards test above spec objectively. And they both work flawlessly on my still (not Canon) and video cameras. I think they have gotten a bad rap here from people who don't have the full picture, so to speak. I'll also post this as a review, and on the Sony 32 GB page, too. I hope you found it informative.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Good choice for automotive media players.
*by J***N on May 19, 2016*

This works very well for my application, which is in a 2015 Dodge Durango SD slot (UConnect 8.4N RA4). Many car SD card slots are limited to cards formatted with the FAT32 filesystem, and the maximum size of a card formatted with FAT32 is (as the name implies) 32GB, so for a lot of cars, this is the best you'll get without some luck and or/hacking. Many also list a maximum speed "class" of 8, but selection of those is pretty slim and usually far more expensive these days. Oftentimes, Class 10 will work just fine. I've owned several Transcend products, from flash drives to SD cards to an SSD, and I've never had a single issue. Flash memory is inherently stable, of course, but Transcend has yet to let me down. I use their flash memory in my phone, car, and computers. Sure, you could spend more, but really, flash memory is made in two factories, that's it. Both make good products, and you'll get the same thing no matter what the label is, as long as it is a recognized name brand and not a nonbranded knockoff which often uses far smaller capacity chips than listed. Transcend offers great value and a recognized name. With Class 10 speeds, the card ceases to be a bottleneck like they were years ago. YOu may notice it takes some time to completely fill the card with ~30GB of data, but that's to be expected with SD currently.It certainly won't slow down reading of music or writing of photos from the camera. Fully Class 10 compliant, Transcend’s Premium SDXC/SDHC Class 10 Cards help improve camera response with ultra-fast read speeds of up to 30MB per second. This outstanding performance is ideal for capturing high-resolution photographs and flawless Full HD videos.Transcend's SDXC/SDHC Class 10 Series memory cards come in a wide range of capacities from 8GB to 128GB to fit your storage needs. Whether you have a simple point and shoot or a high-end DSLR, they are the perfect everyday SDHC card to have during all occasions. The versatile SDXC/SDHC Class 10 cards support the latest Class 10 compliant cameras and camcorders, and are also backward compatible with any devices below Class 10. To improve post production efficiency, maximize the transfer rate by pairing the SDHC card with Transcend's USB 3.0 RDF8 Card Reader to achieve a speed of up to 22MB/s. With a purchase of Transcend’s SDXC/SDHC Class 10 memory cards, you can download RecoveRx software for free. This user-friendly application allows you to conduct an in-depth search within your storage device for traces of erased files to be recovered.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Fast and Reliable Performance - I get 44 Mb/s Read & 27 Mb/s Write
*by F***K on October 6, 2016*

Between the two recent AirShows ( Wings Over Camarillo, CA and MCAS Miramar, San Deigo-CA ) and over 1200 pictures that I've taken at these events I can highly recommend you this Inexpensive and reliable SD card for your DSLR Camera Performance ------------------ - I purchased this SD card from Amazon specifically for the two Airshows mentioned above that I had been planning to visit for almost an year now and I wanted something fast , reliable and one that does not break the bank for my Nikon D5100 DSLR kit. And based on those parameters and my experience, it fits the bill perfectly - I used this SD card for several sustained 'Burst Shots' in Sports mode for capturing fast moving aircraft or taking a fast pic at the right moment when to aircraft were doing a fast head-on flyby (see pics) and this card did not let me down in any of those moments - I also did a synthetic benchmark performance test using the free software CrystalDiskMark : Claimed Performance : "Upto" 30 Mb/S Read and Write, 10 Mb/s Guaranteed Actual Performance : 44 Mb/S Read Max , 27 MB/s Write Max Overall Read Performance : 31 % Faster than max theoretical value claimed Overall Write Performance : 11% Slower than max theoretical value claimed The Good ------------- - Solid real world performance for taking Hi-Res RAW images in Burst mode without any issues - Excellent synthetic performance in benchmark tests as well - Comes with a plastic case for safe storage - Super inexpensive - 30 GB usable storage space - Good warranty policy Cons -------- - I have nothing to complain about this card at its price point - A word of warning thought , because this SD card is so popular, there are plenty of fakes out there , I would HIGHLY recommend verifying your product serial number with the Product Verification Tool on Transcend's official website Final Thoughts ---------------------- If you are looking for a good , reliable SD card that is good enough for fast, sustained burst photography that does not break the bank, you are looking at the right place. I can highly recommend this card

## Frequently Bought Together

- Transcend 32GB SDHC Class 10 Flash Memory Card Up to 30MB/s (TS32GSDHC10), Blue
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*Product available on Desertcart Portugal*
*Store origin: PT*
*Last updated: 2026-04-24*