• expired

30% off Strontium USB, microSD and SD Cards @ Target e.g. 32GB USB for $11.90, 16GB USB for $7

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30% off strontium flash storage at target:
16GB USB Pollex Flash Drive - $7 (Was $10) NB: I'm guessing these are USB 2.0
32GB USB Pollex Flash Drive - $11.90 (Was $17) NB: I'm guessing these are USB 2.0

16GB USB 3.1 Nitro Ammo Flash Drive - $11.20 (Was $16)
32GB USB 3.1 Nitro Ammo Flash Drive - $17.50 (Was $25)

16GB Nitro Micro SDHC Memory Card - $10.50 (Was $15)
32GB Nitro Micro SDHC Memory Card - $15.40 (Was $22)

16GB Nitro SDHC Memory Card - $10.50 (Was $15)
32GB Nitro SDHC Memory Card - $15.40 (Was $22)

Related Stores

Target Australia
Target Australia

closed Comments

  • +1

    Strontium is a good brand and the cards are reliable as I have been using them for a few years. Strontium Technology is founded and headquartered in Singapore.

    • But almost certainly they are manufactured in China. Which isn't necessarily bad, good products are made there, it all depends on quality control.

      • I was looking at the 16GB, $7 drive yesterday at my local store and noticed they're marked as made in Singapore. Don't know about other sizes.

        • That sort of labelling can be ambiguous. They could do the final assembly step or even just the packaging in Singapore.

          • +2

            @retiredfeline: I trust the label more than your imaginary packaging process that you came up with to justify the imagining of the imaginary country that they were manufactured in complete with obligatory imaginary quality standards with a tinge of racism.

            • @Diji1: I guess you haven't been following the discussion around what is Made in Australia, Manufactured in Australia, Product of Australia, etc. etc. But then I guess you trust the government. :P

              When say your Canon snappy camera says Made in Vietnam, do you really think they started from raw materials all in Vietnam? The labelling problem arises because manufacturing is so global so how do you convey the proportions of material that go into products with a short label.

  • How would you recommend these memory caeds with dash cameras?

    • As long as they're Class 10 and your dashcam can't make use of a higher capacity microSD card, should be fine.

    • I'm guessing they should be OK for speed as long as your dash camera isn't 4K : all the pictures have the symbol for "UHS Speed Class 1 (U1) 10 MB/s" which apparently is suitable for "Real-time broadcasts and large HD video files".

      I don't know about longevity but see @beetlebum's comment above.

    • +1

      You should use high endurance cards that allow you to withstand multiple write and rewrite continuously. Normal cards will fail faster in dashcam.

      E.g. https://www.sandisk.com.au/home/memory-cards/microsd-cards/h…

  • Min. $20 for click & collect kills it for me though

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