Hi,
I tried countless times to get the Rpi2 to boot from a 64Gb SD 10 card, on all different Linux OS flavours but to no avail. Does the RPi3 work with anything bigger than a 32Gb SD card ? And if so whats the max size.
Thanks,
Marcus
Hi,
I tried countless times to get the Rpi2 to boot from a 64Gb SD 10 card, on all different Linux OS flavours but to no avail. Does the RPi3 work with anything bigger than a 32Gb SD card ? And if so whats the max size.
Thanks,
Marcus
The maximum size of sd memory card for Raspberry pi 3 is 64Gb. Some of the pi board support I think you need to see your raspberry pi board benchmark. Benchmark gives you detailed information about your raspberry pi board. When you need to format your sd card then visit this website.
That isn't true. I currently have Raspbian installed on my Raspberry Pi 3 that is 100GB+ (128GB I think). I will check on brand/capacity.
updates? I’m about to buy the biggest memory i can an need to know b4 i buy the wro one thank you
updates? I’m about to buy the biggest memory i can an need to know b4 i buy the wro one thank you
Hi Jonathan,
There is a page where people have left feedback about which microSD cards they have confirmed working, and although the list is old, it confirms that 128GB micro SD cards can function with the Pi 3. See here: https://elinux.org/RPi_SD_cards
However, are you sure you want to do that? I personally wouldn't, for this single reason:
The higher-capacity cards are more expensive, especially the higher-performance cards. High numbers of write cycles could damage them, they were not designed for running Linux.
Linux doesn't require 128GB of space (it won't perform any better), you could easily use a lower-cost 8-32GB microSD card for the Pi. Make sure it is a high-performance card.
If it ever fails, you don't lose anything except a small amount of money.
For all your file storage (and even applications if you desire, and your home folder) you could use USB SSD. SSDs designed for frequent read/writes.
Personally I'd buy a lower-capacity card, and if you ever find yourself needing extra storage at any point, then consider USB SSD or a network storage device (NAS).
Anyway, in summary, if you really need such high volumes of storage on a microSD, then 128GB is supported according to that URL.