- Adata starts SD820 and SC735 SSDs external for high -speed portable storage
- SD820 offers resistant durability with transfer speeds of 2000 MB/Sy up to 4 TB capacity
- SC735 offers an Ultra Light design with USB-C and 1050 mb/s retractable speeds
Adata has announced two new external solid state units aimed at users, especially creators, who need compact and portable storage.
The SD820 and SC735 are the last additions to the Adata external transmission line, with each one aimed at different types of users.
The SD820 is the most resistant solution, created for outdoor users who face occasionally demanding conditions. It weighs 26.5 Gy offers reading and writing speeds up to 2000 MB/s using USB 3.2 Gen2 x2.
The storage problem
The impulse complies with the MIL-STD-810G 516.6 standard for dust and water resistance, and Adata says it can support short immersion, as well as drops of 1.22 meters.
Available in capacities of 1 TB, 2TB and 4TB, the SD820 is designed taking into account the creators, especially those who work with large photo and video files.
The SC735 is more for travel comfort. With 13.6 g, it is lighter than its brother and presents a USB type C connector, the cutting cable disorder.
It offers transfer speeds of up to 1050 MB/Sy comes in capacities of 1 TB and 2 TB.
The resistance to the fall is also tested and works with a wide range of platforms, including iOS, Android and Windows.
There is no word about the price or availability for any of the impulses, but it should be able to buy them very soon.
With the resolution of photos and videos, mobile games and applications sizes increasing, there is definitely a market for external units such as SD820 and SC735, and that points to a broader problem.
Smartphone storage has not expanded at the same rate as the average user needs, especially when it comes to budgetary models and average range.
Android 15 Solo, for example, occupies around 30 GB, leaving less space for media and applications on many devices. Yes, photos and videos can (and must) be backed to the cloud, but many people like to keep copies on their devices.
I know someone who is always fighting to release space on his Android phone because his model came with a small amount of storage on the device.
At the same time, many phones are sent with USB-C ports that are still limited to slower USB 2.0 speeds, which makes direct transfers less practical.
This combination of slow ports and limited internal storage is exactly why external SSDs such as new Adata units begin to feel less as useful devices and more as everyday needs.
Until telephone manufacturers address storage limitations directly, products such as SD820 and SC735 will continue to fill a vacuum that probably should probably not exist first.