Lexar’s new Diamond-series Type-B CFexpress cards are the world’s fastest

Lexar' CFexpress Type-B cards will soon be much faster and it now has Type-A cards, too.
Lexar’s CFexpress -B cards will soon be much faster and it now has Type-A cards, too. Lexar

With 4K video now the established standard and even higher resolution modes becoming more common—not to mention Raw capture—modern video cameras can output truly spectacular amounts of data. Thankfully, storage media performance continues to improve in lockstep with our ever-growing needs. As of the point, Lexar—nowadays a part of Chinese storage/memory-maker Longsys—has just set a new benchmark for Type-B CFexpress card performance.

With Lexar’s new Diamond-series cards, announced this week at the NAB Show in Las Vegas, the company claims a maximum speed of 1900MB/s. That’s almost 10% faster than the 1750MB/s max read speed from the company’s existing Gold-series cards. Admittedly, though, that’s only a scant 50MB/s better than the 1850MB/s read speed claimed by previous record-holder, Exascend, for its own recently-launched Type-B CFexpress cards.

Related: New gear: Nikon’s speedy CFexpress card will hit shelves this summer

It’s in the write speeds where we see the *really* big news, though. After all, that’s what dictates your video capture capabilities and buffer depths for still imaging. Read speeds, on the hand, matter most for playback and when it comes time to offload your data.

Lexar’s new Diamond-series cards offer a write speed to 1700MB/s. By comparison, the brand’s -series Type-B cards out at a write speed of 1000MB/s, while its Silver-series cards can sustain only 600MB/s. That means the new Diamond-series cards should offer nearly double the write performance of the Gold-series, and more than triple the performance of Silver-series cards.

All of this is great news, but there are a few key still to be revealed. Notably, Lexar has yet to disclose either the capacity range or pricing for the Diamond-series cards.

The Gold-series currently spans a range from 64GB to 512GB, while the Silver-series is limited to just 128GB and 256GB capacities. Lexar’s press materials indicate that we can expect a 256GB card at the very least, and we’d expect higher capacities as well given that rival Exascend already has a 512GB competitor. But we don’t yet know what the maximum capacity will be for this new line.

Alongside the Diamond-series launch, Lexar says that it also plans to launch a new Gold-series lineup of the smaller CFExpress Type-A cards. Again, we don’t yet know capacities or pricing. We do know that they’ll arrive alongside a new Type-A card reader with -performance 10Gb/s USB Type-C connectivity.

Just like the aforementioned Diamond-series Type-B cards, these new Type-A will carry VPG400 branding. Performance for the Type-A cards is 900MB/s when reading and 800MB/s when writing.

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