Western Digital's BiCS8 218-layer 3D NAND is being put to good use in a wide range of client and enterprise platforms, including WD's upcoming Gen 5 client SSDs and 128 TB-class datacenter SSD. On the external storage front, the company demonstrated four different products: for card-based media, 4 TB microSDUC and 8 TB SDUC cards with UHS-I speeds, and on the portable SSD front we had two 16 TB drives. One will be a SanDisk Desk Drive with external power, and the other in the SanDisk Extreme Pro housing with a lanyard opening in the case.

All of these are using BiCS8 QLC NAND, though I did hear booth talk (as I was taking leave) that they were not supposed to divulge the use of QLC in these products. The 4 TB microSDUC and 8 TB SDUC cards are rated for UHS-I speeds. They are being marketed under the SanDisk Ultra branding.

The SanDisk Desk Drive is an external SSD with a 18W power adapter, and it has been in the market for a few months now. Initially launched in capacities up to 8 TB, Western Digital had promised a 16 TB version before the end of the year. It appears that the product is coming to retail quite soon. One aspect to note is that this drive has been using TLC for the SKUs that are currently in the market, so it appears unlikely that the 16 TB version would be QLC. The units (at least up to the 8 TB capacity point) come with two SN850XE drives. Given the recent introduction of the 8 TB SN850X, an 'E' version with tweaked firmware is likely to be present in the 16 TB Desk Drive.

The 16 TB portable SSD in the SanDisk Extreme housing was a technology demonstration. It is definitely the highest capacity bus-powered portable SSD demonstrated by any vendor at any trade show thus far. Given the 16 TB Desk Drive's imminent market introduction, it is just a matter of time before the technology demonstration of the bus-powered version becomes a retail reality.

Source: Western Digital

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  • SagePath - Monday, August 12, 2024 - link

    Would like to see MicroSD express take fokd with new products and controllers.
  • nandnandnand - Monday, August 12, 2024 - link

    It's not just Express, you need an SDUC controller to read anything larger than 2 TiB.
  • ballsystemlord - Monday, August 12, 2024 - link

    Well hopefully we'll see SDUC controllers become ubiquitous in the various laptops, PC cases, and SD Card adapters.
  • nandnandnand - Tuesday, August 13, 2024 - link

    I hope so but the format could be in serious decline with microSD being removed from many smartphones and CFexpress taking off instead of SD Express in cameras.
  • abufrejoval - Tuesday, August 13, 2024 - link

    I bought two 400GB µ-SDcards some time ago for a Samsung tablet and a Lenovo VR headset...

    But I must have taken them out and put somewhere else instead of the usual cough drops box, where I keep them.

    Small is great until you're looking for them and realize that at these capacities Exabytes could get lost in my home without hemming me in...

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