🚀 Elevate Your Storage Game!
The Transcend 8GB JetFlash 810 USB 3.0 Flash Drive combines high-speed data transfer with rugged durability, making it the perfect companion for professionals on the go. With easy plug-and-play functionality and advanced data management tools, this flash drive is designed to keep your data safe and accessible in any environment.
D**E
32gb usb 3
Purchased for specific compatability with Canon PRISMASync hardware.
C**0
A very good flash drive
This Transcend Flash Drive was recommended by Tascam to properly wok with my new Tascam CD-A508 Deck. And it works just fine I highly recommend it.
M**R
Why buy a bigger thumb drive if you will neber exceed 8GB in a specific application
In today's world of 64-512GB thumb drives, these seem pretty tiny. However, they can't be beat for use in specific applications where 8GB is more than enough. For me, my typical college course uses up about 5-7GB of room for all my PPT lectures and supplementary video and animations. I dedicate one of these thumb drives to each of my courses. This keeps things neat and orderly, and safe!. These drives are reasonably fast (10-15MB/s transfers), and they are inexpensive. Right now I have six of these dedicated to the six courses I routinely teach. The oldest ones are about 3-years old now and they are still functioning perfectly. I have yet to have the USB-end of one of these pull the memory guts from the rubber enclosure (as was a constant problem with my old Patriot rubber thumb drives). So, for constant use in places where the total content will not exceed 8GB, these drives can make your life a lot less complex.
T**N
Bad
It was broken after copying a 15GB file.
V**N
Sux - drive failed
Loved this jump drive when it showed up. Grippy rubber casing was very appealing. Alas, it failed within a couple of months. While I had a backup on my computer, it was a couple of weeks old and I had to reconstruct a lot of progress. Won't trust this brand name again!
L**Y
Linux_Clonezilla
It works very nicely as a dedicated drive for Clonezilla. I wanted a nice color (green) and rubber texture, plus not fat and bulky. This fits those criteria. Speed is more than adequate and way bigger than needed. I have so many dedicated flash drives that I need distinct colors. I'm a sucker for lime green.
J**T
Reliable; no glitches
I chose this brand 'cuz I wanted definite reliability. I've owned this drive for 7 months now. I have loaded over 300 videos on it and am very satisfied with it's performance. No mysterious deletes, nor any surprises. have loaded over 300 videos on it and am very satisfied with it's performance. No mysterious deletes, nor any surprises.
D**S
Reliable
Works well. Use it every day in class to show PowerPoints and video clips. Fast enough for everything I use. Rugged cover helps since it's in bag with binders and books getting a bit squashed. Didn't think I would miss an activity light (doesn't have one), but a light does add reassurance that files are indeed transferring, so took off one star for that.
A**R
Device fails after a period of time
I would not recommend this flash drive at all. In the 'old' days of home desktop computing Transcend were good trusted RAM modules at reasonable prices but this device is poor. Bought it to back up important and personal information/documents and after several months (with infrequent backing up files) it now won't be recognized by my computer. Same computer that wrote the files to it. Fortunately from experience I keep double back-ups so I am covered. I only purchases this Apr 2020 and it may be Amazon or my lack of knowledge but there seems to be no way to get this item returned/replaced under warranty. Do they deliberately make this process difficult/obscured?
S**G
Drive death, but managed to save files by employing brute force
In the 'old' days USB flash drives seemed to last for ages. Nowadays, every flash drive reviewed here has 10+% of users complaining their drive has died within weeks of purchase.Between 2000 and 2014, I probably went through about 5 drives and I think only one of those actually died, the others were just superceded by faster and larger capacity drives. They weren't particularly sturdy, all having plastic cases; they were all fairly well known makes (PNY, Bytstore, Toshiba etc), but at the cheap end of the range; and all of them had caps, which I consider an essential to stop them gathering fluff as the nestled quietly in my pocket.My next drive was a 64GB with similar spec, but USB 2.0. It worked fine for a year before some wayward mobile furniture careened into it, snapping it in the USB port. Thankfully, after some awkward interior and exterior sellotaping, I managed to keep the bits together long enough to retrieve my data.So this Transcend drive was my next purchase. At sub-£20 it was cheap, with decent storage, decent write speed, USB 3.0, it has the all-important cap. The only obvious difference was the rubber case, which I figured would actually be better than my previous drives, in the event an unexpected drop or knock.Just over a month after purchase (soon after the warranty sign-up and Amazon return periods had expired) it failed.It would appear just as "Removable Drive", and sometimes not at all. It wouldn't open, wouldn't CHKDSK, wouldn't let me change drive letter, and wouldn't format. The Transcend online repair tool didn't recognise it, and neither would any of the other USB repair tools I tried. I tried it in USB 2.0 and 3.0 ports in multiple computers, with and without a USB extension cable, but nothing seemed to work.I couldn't let go, though, didn't want to admit defeat... I tried in vain a few more times over the next few days.In a last ditch attempt to get my data back / fit of pique, I held the flash drive in the USB port at an unpleasant angle - pushing the back end further to one side than I would normally have dared. If it breaks, it breaks, I thought. If I damage the USB port, well, I'll just have to repair or replace it.And suddenly... there it was - under Computer > Devices with Removable Storage, my flash drive's stupid, glorious name visible for the first time in a week!I slightly relaxed my awkward grip and it reverted to the plain old useless, inaccessible Removable Disk. I pushed it again, found the sweet spot, and the name reappeared!Quick! I held the drive firmly at its wonky aspect and dragged the files and folders to my desktop a bunch at a time.I managed to copy everything, all 30GB of files that I had no up-to-date backups of. Thank all the flips for that!So... for you people who feel they've tried everything and are inches away from hitting your flash drive with hammers, maybe, just maybe, you can access your drive one final time as I did, by the damn thing steady in the port, at a slightly horrible slant....Good luck!
L**G
Fabulous, so far...
It holds so many films without failing thus far. The only thing i'd add is that it should have had a easily attached cover - either a sliding one or detachable but still stuck to the appendage type instead of the on-off cap cover - which I've since lost. Anyway, enough negativity... It's robust, sturdy, doesn't have an internal flashing light indicating the drive has been found, no password needed - just insert and go. I don't need to passcode my flash drives as they only contain films - innocuous ones mind! Ha! Another reason I chose this was because Transcend fared in the top 3 of flash drives for 2013 so we'll see how long this lasts... update on it's performance later on in the year.
P**K
Good idea but not as great as it might seem.
Whilst you might think it a great idea to be in a rubber shell to protect against dropping, it's actually a lot more fragile than it's hard shelled counterpart. Keep this in a trouser pocket as one might tend to and it WILL get bent and fail. This is the second one I have had of this rubber version and this packed up a few weeks ago having been in my pocket for regular use. The other solid shelled versions in the same pocket are all working perfectly. If you want to keep one of these in a trouser pocket then consider the hard shelled version!
H**I
For once, Transcend USB doesn't feel flimsy
I've never been a big fan of Transcend's USBs - they always feel like they are on the verge of snapping in two. But this one bucks the trend. It feels a bit more durable than other Transcend USBs and it also is easy to grip.This is a very handy product to carry around - USB 3.0 means good transfer speeds (if the connecting device is compliant), and 64GB memory means sufficient storage space for work or media files.Only concern, the cap feels like it might come off at any point. If this doesn't concern you too much, go for this product. The USB itself is well worth the price.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
2 weeks ago