⚡ Tough meets sleek: Power your data on the go!
The Lexar JumpDrive Tough 32GB USB 3.1 Flash Drive combines military-grade durability with high-speed data transfer, featuring resistance to impact (up to 750 PSI), extreme temperatures (-13°F to 300°F), and water immersion (up to 98 feet). Its compact, lightweight design ensures portability, while universal PC and Mac compatibility makes it a versatile choice for professionals who demand reliability and speed.
Write Speed | 60 Megabytes Per Second |
Read Speed | 130 Megabytes Per Second |
Connectivity Technology | USB |
Color | Black |
Flash Memory Type | USB |
Manufacturer | Lexar International |
Hardware Connectivity Technology | USB Type A |
UPC | 843367140107 650590202393 |
Global Trade Identification Number | 00650590202393, 00843367140107 |
Item model number | LJDTD32GABNL |
Hardware Platform | PC, Mac |
Item Weight | 0.01 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 2.44 x 0.42 x 0.84 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 2.44 x 0.42 x 0.84 inches |
Flash Memory Size | 32 GB |
Department | Womens |
ASIN | B012PKT4QS |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | July 27, 2015 |
K**R
Lexar Makes Good Flash Drives
I have an older Lexar Flash Drive. I left it in my pants pocket, washed and dried my pants with the flash drive in it. It still works. I am amazed and impressed. I hope this model is as durable.
D**N
Highly recommended
Very good and reliable product, for the meantime (I received it only a few weeks before). I bought it in order to use it and leave itin my car all the time. I live in a very hot and humid climate, day and night. The memory stick I had before was gone after 2 months of usein these very difficult conditions. I hope this one will endure, with no problems, our hot climate.
J**S
It's really good
It fits on my lanyard and quickly install into the computers at work. The only downside is that it is so big that the slow computers take a while to read all the large files on it.
M**.
Exceptionally good budget USB 3 flash drive.
As what I think is the best choice for a budget USB 3.1 high capacity flash drive, the Lexar JumpDrive Tough 128GB does have some fallbacks. For one, as with nearly every USB flash drive that isn't SSD based, writing many small files takes forever and often has me opting to just either zip or 7z all the files up into neat fat32 compatible larger files and transfer those in a quick fashion, or just use the flash drive for only transferring bigger files. However, seeing as how this is a pretty universal problem for non-SSD portable drives, I don't feel as though this is too much of a con, however, people may not realize this when purchasing the drive.Other than that, the drive is formatted by default to fat32 which creates a 2gb file size limit when transferring, and although I haven't formatted the drive to NTFS or any other format, I don't see why it would be a problem to since the drive shows its real strength when transferring larger files.The drive is very durable, as the product page implies, but the cap doesn't have any way to stay attached to the drive when not in use, which also detracts from the overall quality of the product. And, once you lose the cap, the drive is no longer waterproof.All in all, for the exceptionally good price, this USB 3.1 128GB flash drive is one heck of a bargain and I still fully recommend it.
C**R
Built tough
Works as advertised. It’s a USB drive, not much to say other than it’s built damn tough. Been using it on a film project and it’s come in very handy for transferring graphics, music cues, whatnot. Been using for two week, no problems.
A**H
Rugged and reiable
Most pleased with what seems a rugged and reliable drive which is also fast and high capacity. So far it has worked just fine.
T**E
Good to go!
I bought this to be used as my travel USB, but ended up using it as my recovery for Windows 10. It works great and fast.
T**R
BURNED -- don't buy
I got the 64G version, and felt immediate assurance of ruggedness. However, in use, initial copying went more-or-less as expected, then the speed decreased, and decreased..., and asymptotically went to zero. An attempt to use roughly half of its (their) space never went past 60% (so 30% of the drive) or so.This unfortunately included zeroing out the drive(s), so as I can not be sure there's nothing left, I'm going for "defective media retention", destroying my copy (copies), and eating the cost, rather than return it defective and risking data leakage.Note that while performance wasn't identical for the two I bought, it was close enough that I'm calling this model bad. And as to the file mix that I was attempting..., best guess is that big files (ISOs, DVD images) went just fine, but a slew of little files spread across a directory three three or four deep, that choked the drive(s) down.
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