Bambu Lab SD Card: Do You Really Need to Replace It? A Comprehensive Analysis
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Time to read 5 min
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Time to read 5 min
For every Bambu Lab P1P user, the performance and reliability of the Bambu Lab SD Card that comes with the printer are core concerns directly affecting printing experience. Many users have encountered unexpected freezes or print failures during use, and the unbranded Official SD Card has become the primary suspect. In this article, we take that Card as the core research object, conduct in-depth tracing of its production origin, professional performance testing, and practical scenario analysis to answer whether that Card needs to be replaced and what kind of SD card is suitable for upgrading if necessary.
The biggest confusion about the Official Bambu Lab SD Card is its lack of clear brand identification—only the place of origin and a small amount of internal production data can be seen on the card surface, making it impossible to directly judge its quality. To solve this problem, we start with the core identifier of the Bambu Lab SD Card: the CID (Card Identification Register) code.
Each genuine SD(TF) Card has a unique 16-digit hexadecimal CID code, which records key information such as the manufacturer ID, product serial number, and production date of the Memory Card. Among them, the first two digits of the CID code are the manufacturer ID, which is the key to tracing the production source of the Bambu Lab SD Card. However, the Association does not publicly release the corresponding table of manufacturer IDs, so we can only rely on industry accumulated experience and open-source technical documents for verification.
Reading the CID code of the SD Card has two feasible methods, which are applicable to different hardware environments:
After decoding the CID code of the Bambu Lab SD Card, we found that its manufacturer ID is FE. By checking the SD card manufacturer coding table disclosed in the Linux system update log, we confirmed that FE corresponds to Micron Technology. It is worth noting that Micron's consumer-grade SD cards start at 128GB, while the Bambu Lab SD Card is 32GB, which is fully consistent with the specifications of Micron's industrial-grade SD cards. We think that SD Card uses industrial-grade core chips or very early consumer-grade components like someone said 2016.
To objectively evaluate the performance of the Bambu Lab SD Card, we set up a control group test with three different levels of SD cards, taking the Bambu Lab SD Card as the core test subject, and conducted multi-dimensional performance verification:
The test data of the Bambu Lab SD Card exceeded expectations, and its performance fully meets the high requirements of Bambu Lab P1P:
Combined with the performance test data of the Bambu Lab SD Card and the actual usage scenarios of Bambu Lab P1P, we give clear suggestions for whether to replace the card:
The SD Card undertakes core tasks of Bambu Lab P1P such as storing G-Code files, power-off resume data, and printing process image/log recording, which requires high stability and sustained read/write capabilities. The Bambu Lab SD Card uses Micron chips. The printing freezes or failures that users encounter are mostly caused by firmware bugs (Bambu Lab has fixed part of the bugs in subsequent firmware updates), rather than the performance of the SD Card itself. It can meet the daily printing needs of most users. Only if you find there is the error of SD card , you can replace it.
Replacing the original Bambu Lab SD Card with ordinary consumer-grade high-speed SD cards has little practical significance, and the improvement in printing experience is almost negligible. The only worthwhile upgrade direction for the Bambu Lab SD Card is to replace it with industrial-grade SLC (Single-Level Cell) or MLC (Multi-Level Cell) SD cards—these cards can provide more stable read performance during long-term printing, which is the only scenario where replacing the SD Card has practical value.
It is strictly not recommended to replace the Bambu Lab SD Card with low-speed cards such as SanDisk Class 4, which will seriously reduce the read/write efficiency of the Bambu Lab SD Card and even lead to more printing failures.
The Bambu Lab SD Card, which is often mistaken for a "no-brand, low-quality" accessory, is actually an quite good storage solution customized by Bambu Lab with Micron chips. Its performance and stability are far higher than the cognitive level of most users. For Bambu Lab P1P users, upgrading the firmware is the first choice to solve printing problems related to the Bambu Lab SD Card, rather than blindly replacing your SD Card.
If you really need to upgrade the Bambu Lab SD Card, focus on industrial-grade SLC/MLC products instead of consumer-grade SD cards—only in this way can the replacement of the Bambu Lab SD Card bring real stability improvement, rather than unnecessary cost input.