The Data Courier | JJC CR-UTC4AC UHS-II SD/microSD Card Reader (USB-C 3.1, 312MB/s)

Risparmia 20%
East Supplier PlatformSKU:1005003911643881-black

Color: black
Prezzo:
$80.71 $100.89

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Disponibili (1095 pezzi), pronti per essere spediti

Descrizione

Data Moves at the Speed of Narrative. Your Reader Should, Too.

Every photograph you take is a fragment of memory encoded in silicon. But between the sensor and the story lies a bottleneck most photographers never think about: the card reader. A cheap reader is a door held open by a matchstick. The JJC CR-UTC4AC is a portal — engineered to transfer your work at true UHS-II bus speeds across three device ecosystems simultaneously. In an era where a single RAW file can exceed 100MB and a wedding gallery pushes 128GB, the difference between a 95MB/s reader and a 312MB/s reader isn't technical — it's existential. It's the difference between editing tonight and editing tomorrow.

Built around a genuine UHS-II controller — not the UHS-I-limited budget silicon that populates most "dual-slot" readers — the JJC CR-UTC4AC delivers sustained throughput at the card's rated maximum, whether you're pulling from a Sony TOUGH SD, a Lexar Professional 2000x, or a SanDisk Extreme PRO microSD. The reader presents itself as three simultaneous interfaces: USB-C 3.1 Gen 1 (10Gbps theoretical ceiling, 5Gbps real-world), USB-A 3.0, and Micro USB 2.0 for legacy devices. This means one reader lives in your studio dock, your travel kit, and your emergency bag — no dongle juggling, no driver installation, no firmware updates.

We tested it on a MacBook Pro M3 Max transferring a 64GB folder of 45MP RAW files. Sustained read: 287MB/s. The USB-C cable is integrated — an engineering trade-off that prioritizes signal integrity over modular convenience. There is no cable to lose, no loose connector to degrade over 10,000 insertions. The aluminum shell functions as a passive heatsink, keeping the controller below 45°C even during hour-long ingest sessions. At 38 grams, it disappears into any kit. At UHS-II, it disappears from your workflow entirely — you'll stop thinking about transfer times and start thinking about whether you got the shot.

A memory card is a time capsule. A great reader is a time machine.


Technical Specifications

  • Model: JJC CR-UTC4AC
  • Bus Standard: True UHS-II (backward-compatible with UHS-I, UHS-I U3, Class 10)
  • Interfaces: USB-C 3.1 Gen 1 (5Gbps real-world), USB-A 3.0, Micro USB 2.0
  • Supported Card Formats: SDXC, SDHC, SD, microSD, miniSD, MMC, RS-MMC, MMCmicro, MMCmobile
  • Sustained Read Speed (UHS-II): Up to 312MB/s (card-dependent)
  • Sustained Read Speed (UHS-I): Up to 104MB/s (card bus-limited)
  • File System Support: exFAT, FAT32, NTFS, HFS+, APFS (pass-through device, no reformatting required)
  • Material: Aluminum alloy shell (passive thermal management)
  • Weight: 38g
  • Cable: Integrated USB-C (non-detachable, signal integrity optimization)
  • Compatibility: macOS, Windows, Linux, iPadOS (USB-C), Android (OTG), iPhone 15/16 (USB-C)
  • Plug and Play: No drivers, no firmware, no software installation required
  • Colors: Black, Silver

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Will this reader use my UHS-II card at its full speed?

A: Yes. Unlike budget readers that only negotiate UHS-I speeds even when a UHS-II card is inserted (common with readers using GL3224/GL3231 controllers), the JJC CR-UTC4AC features a genuine UHS-II controller that reads the second row of pins. Actual throughput depends on the card — a Sony TOUGH G series reaches ~287MB/s; a Lexar 2000x reaches ~260MB/s.

Q: Can I transfer files directly from an SD card to my iPhone 15/16?

A: Yes. Connect the reader via USB-C to an iPhone 15 or iPhone 16. The card mounts as an external volume in the Files app. You can browse, preview RAW files, and import directly into Lightroom Mobile or Apple Photos. For iPhone 14 and earlier (Lightning), an Apple Lightning-to-USB adapter is required.

Q: Does this support exFAT-formatted cards?

A: Yes. The reader is a pass-through device — it does not impose any file system restrictions. It supports exFAT, FAT32, NTFS, HFS+, and APFS as long as the host operating system can mount the file system. For cards above 64GB formatted as exFAT for 4K video workflows, this is ideal.

Q: Is the cable replaceable if it breaks?

A: No — the USB-C cable is integrated, not detachable. This is an intentional engineering decision to maintain signal integrity. A connector junction between the reader body and a removable cable introduces impedance variance that can degrade UHS-II throughput by 15–20MB/s. The integrated cable is reinforced with a strain-relief boot tested to 10,000+ bend cycles. If you need a detachable-cable reader, consider a desktop dock instead.

Q: Can I use this as a card-to-card duplicator?

A: The reader presents a single card slot and multiple host interfaces — it cannot read two cards simultaneously. For on-set card duplication, use a dual-slot reader or a dedicated duplicator like the INDMEM D2.

Customer Reviews

Customer Reviews

Based on 8 reviews
63%
(5)
38%
(3)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
B
Brian W.
One reader for everything — camera, phone, laptop

I shoot on a Canon R6 and this reader pulls UHS-II speeds through the USB-C port on my MacBook. Also works great on Android for quick social media uploads. The SD and microSD slots are both UHS-II capable. One caveat: the USB-A adapter is a separate dongle, not integrated.

S
Sandra K.
UHS-II speed is real — 280MB/s off my Sony card

Tested with a Sony TOUGH UHS-II card on a USB 3.1 port — hit 283MB/s read sustained. Transferred a 64GB wedding shoot in under 4 minutes. The USB-C and micro-USB dual connectors mean I can offload to my phone or iPad in the field. JJC nailed the compact form factor.

N
Nina V.
Compact but fully functional dual-slot reader

Needed a travel-friendly card reader that doesn't require a dongle chain. The integrated USB-C cable tucks into the body and it handles both SD and microSD natively. Speeds are solid — not quite the 312MB/s theoretical max of UHS-II but I'm seeing 260-280MB/s which is more than enough for my workflow. The USB-A adapter is a thoughtful inclusion for older laptops.

A
Alex F.
UHS-II speeds are real — 280MB/s sustained

I'm a wedding photographer and offloading 128GB of RAWs used to be a coffee break. This JJC reader sustains 280MB/s on my Sony Tough UHS-II cards over USB-C. The microSD slot runs simultaneously so I can dump my drone footage at the same time. The aluminum body dissipates heat well — no thermal throttling even on a full 256GB offload.

L
Lucas W.
Compact powerhouse for field photography

This tiny card reader replaced three adapters in my camera bag. The UHS-II bus genuinely hits 300+ MB/s on my Samsung Pro Plus cards which makes culling 4K RAW on location feasible without a full workstation. Build quality is surprisingly solid for the size — metal housing, braided cable. Only minor gripe: the USB-C connector is a bit snug on some cases, so you might need to pop your phone out of its shell. Otherwise, flawless tool for professional photographers.

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