Okay, so I keep burning out my sd cards that are class four. One of my raspberry pi's has a class 10 ST card in it and has latter longer than two of my class fours.
So now On this raspberry, I'm not messing around and I got another class 10.
Some cards have a read/write speed of 30 MB a second.
This one is 95
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B007NDL542/ref=pe_385040_30332200_pe_309540_26725410_item
Should I have just bought a regular class 10? Cause 95 seems pretty cool.
I using Sandisk Extreme cards, and they are great. But this is just to much, no need that speed. 35 is just OK
![Wink Wink](http://forum.xbian.org/images/smilies/wink.gif)
I've merged your threads as you double posted in two sections
(10th Aug, 2013 01:01 AM)rikardo1979 Wrote: [ -> ]I using Sandisk Extreme cards, and they are great. But this is just to much, no need that speed. 35 is just OK ![Wink Wink](http://forum.xbian.org/images/smilies/wink.gif)
Well, hopefully it lasts longer than my last two...
For my money I'd get a small 2.5" external HDD and install onto that. (see post USB installation)
The speeds quoted are usually for sequential read, and as Xbian is mainly short I/O read and writes, you'd never really notice the difference.
(10th Aug, 2013 01:16 AM)IriDium Wrote: [ -> ]For my money I'd get a small 2.5" external HDD and install onto that. (see post USB installation)
The speeds quoted are usually for sequential read, and as Xbian is mainly short I/O read and writes, you'd never really notice the difference.
you just waste more power as u need to feed the HDD
![Wink Wink](http://forum.xbian.org/images/smilies/wink.gif)
keep it green as possible m8
![Wink Wink](http://forum.xbian.org/images/smilies/wink.gif)
(10th Aug, 2013 01:16 AM)IriDium Wrote: [ -> ]For my money I'd get a small 2.5" external HDD and install onto that. (see post USB installation)
The speeds quoted are usually for sequential read, and as Xbian is mainly short I/O read and writes, you'd never really notice the difference.
So what I needed was one with the fastest short I/o r/w... Hopefully this one is fast at that too...
(10th Aug, 2013 01:16 AM)IriDium Wrote: [ -> ]For my money I'd get a small 2.5" external HDD and install onto that. (see post USB installation)
The speeds quoted are usually for sequential read, and as Xbian is mainly short I/O read and writes, you'd never really notice the difference.
Are you recommending this for reliability? Cause I don't need any space beyond what xbian needs.
(10th Aug, 2013 01:39 AM)Liggerstuxin Wrote: [ -> ] (10th Aug, 2013 01:16 AM)IriDium Wrote: [ -> ]For my money I'd get a small 2.5" external HDD and install onto that. (see post USB installation)
The speeds quoted are usually for sequential read, and as Xbian is mainly short I/O read and writes, you'd never really notice the difference.
So what I needed was one with the fastest short I/o r/w... Hopefully this one is fast at that too...
(10th Aug, 2013 01:16 AM)IriDium Wrote: [ -> ]For my money I'd get a small 2.5" external HDD and install onto that. (see post USB installation)
The speeds quoted are usually for sequential read, and as Xbian is mainly short I/O read and writes, you'd never really notice the difference.
Are you recommending this for reliability? Cause I don't need any space beyond what xbian needs.
There have been a lot of issues with corrupt SD cards. Many of these problems should be reduced with the *new* btrfs file system.
However, by moving the O/S off of the SD card onto external media means the SD card is only read at boot, then no longer touched. For that simple case, a class 4 will suffice.
A small USB powered HDD in the UK is only £30 for 100Gb and as it is USB powered it will only draw a max of 500ma - so as green as grass :-)
Obviously a solid state HDD would be better but my first name is not Sheik!
A usb powered hdd directly connected to the RPi is not recommended due to possible power issues.
I also recommend Class 4 cards, I have had no problems with SanDisk Class 4 cards.
I have a 16 gigabyte and two 4 gigabyte cards that are a couple of years old. The 4 gigabyte cards read at about 18MB/s and the 16 gigabyte reads at around 22MB/s. I have seen Class 10 cards read slower on the Pi (it's actually common).
(10th Aug, 2013 02:39 AM)Fred Wrote: [ -> ]A usb powered hdd directly connected to the RPi is not recommended due to possible power issues.
Don't do it. Always use a powered USB hub. (adding to what you said(not directed at you)).
(10th Aug, 2013 04:08 AM)f1vefour Wrote: [ -> ] (10th Aug, 2013 02:39 AM)Fred Wrote: [ -> ]A usb powered hdd directly connected to the RPi is not recommended due to possible power issues.
Don't do it. Always use a powered USB hub. (adding to what you said(not directed at you)).
Well, I'll let you guys know if 1channel, film on, mash up, etc runs any different . Worst case scenario I have a card that will last longer...
I think Ill use a copied .img file of xbian for convenience. Do you think I should start over and do a clean install since I'm having problems, or should I just use this image that has everything the way I like it for the new card?
Back up your home folder and re-install is my advice, then copy the contents of your home folder back giving you all your plug-ins and such back.
(10th Aug, 2013 02:48 PM)f1vefour Wrote: [ -> ]Back up your home folder and re-install is my advice, then copy the contents of your home folder back giving you all your plug-ins and such back.
and export/import library - better to do this way
![Wink Wink](http://forum.xbian.org/images/smilies/wink.gif)
It looks like the RPi MAXIMUM speed achieved from the SD card controller is 25MB/s but in reality only speeds of 22MB/s (due to overheads).