ChrisPanzer
Active Member
Just makes u scratch ur head bc this same card was in my Asus t100 transformer for almost a year without incidence.
That's all very interesting (honestly, pretty cool stuff), but from a consumerist standpoint, I just expect my high-end device to WORK. If these tolerances are so ultra-sensitive, I expect the manufacturer to design the receiving device to adapt to a range of widths and still operate.My dad was a tool and die maker, made s lot of injection molds for all sorts of things and any kind of gear, rod, cam, lever, etc. you could think of. Tolerances were typically a thousandth of an inch, hundredths of a millimeter (.o25mm).
In an eight cavity mold for say plastic Spice container tops each cavity has to be made in the right spot with exact tolerances or the tops might have sharp edges, would be too loose or tight to open. Even one cavity with a defect would adversely affect quality. The same would apply to microSD cards. IDK how many they would make at once but something this small would likely be well into double digits. Thin 4mill electrical has a thickness of .1016 mm
Scotch tape is .038mm.
Scratch you head over that. Why would you need to add so much to the card? Other cards would have the same problem if the slot was too big. The slot is something made by a supplier that's fit to the board. IMO the most likely cause of this problem is inconsistency in the manufacture of the cards.
Then you have the ever present issue of fake cards on the market. i.e. a knockoff that's not a genuine product.
To me, the very fact that it DOES indeed work, without incidence, in another device, for a prolonged period of time, is a telling sign that it may very well be a hardware issue (albeit minor) with the SP3.
Have you tried it with other SP3? Yours might be defective, as one other guy said, a small tolerance mistake could be a disaster. And the mistake might as well found in your SP3The other day, I inserted one of my wifes old SanDisk SDHC 4GB micro cards into the slot. It has worked perfectly, the longest stretch ever that a card has worked in the slot.
It may very well be the 128gb card itself.
No, it slides into the slot, sans a 'click' sound.Pretty disappointing to see this flaw in the SP3. I was planning to store some rarely used virtual machine images at some point. It could be that some MicroSD cards are a bit thinner, but there should be an internal mechanism to properly push the card against contacts no matter what the thickness is. I also heard that the microSD in the SP3 does not make the usual "click" sound when pushing the card inside the slot.