
We went into the ASUS USB 3.0 Boost utility and enabled turbo mode on the MobileLite G4 and was able to improve performance up to 251MB/s read and 213MB/s write, which is pretty damn impressive.
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We went from getting 45MB/s read and 43MB/s write on the MobileLite G3 to 246MB/s read and 209MB/s write on the MobileLite G4! We were also shocked to find that the Kingston MobileLite G4 that costs just $10.36 shipped was just slightly faster than the SanDisk Extreme Pro UHS-II SD Reader/Writer (SDDR-329) that runs $42.00 shipped. This can skew some results in favor of controllers that also do not support NCQ.īenchmark Results: After running the CrystalDiskMark storage test with the default settings (incompressible data) we found some pretty big differences between the MobileLite G4 that supports UHS-II cards and the Mobile Lite G3 that doesn’t officially support the newer UHS-II SD memory cards. Note that CDM only supports Native Command Queuing (NCQ) with a queue depth of 32 (as noted) for the last listed benchmark score. CrystalDiskMark 3.0.3 圆4ĬrystalDiskMark is a small benchmark utility for drives and enables rapid measurement of sequential and random read/write speeds. The bad news is that the ports directly to the left and right of the reader are still blocked. The previous generation MobileLite G2 and G3 drives would block this port.


In the image above you can see that the MobileLite G4 is thin enough to be used on the rear I/O panel of a desktop motherboard without impacting the USB port directly below it. This card is rated at up to 280MB/s and is the fastest SD card that we have in our arsenal to test with. We used the SanDisk Extreme Pro UHS-II 32GB Memory Card ( review) to try out the MobileLite G4 memory card reader.
