Today (7/7/20), Windows updated the RealTek USB Card Reader driver from version 2.0 to 3.0. Can anyone shed light on what's in the new version. I'm not interested in obvious generalities. In particular I need to know if the update addressed the issue of
unwanted disconnects (ejects, dismounts) of a storage device.
[Skip to my jaygourley July 10 post: The new RealTek card reader driver probably has the same Surface integration problem as the old one.]
I and many other users on this community had persistent problems with the card reader in several successive generations of Surface Pro (including my 4 and 6). Windows would spontaneously disconnect (eject, dismount, etc) a microSD card. For those of us
who were using the cards as mass storage for critical files, this was a crippling defect that could cost hours each time it occurred.
The unwanted storage drive disconnect problem was easily "solved" by replacing RealTek driver with the Windows USB Mass Storage Device driver (see https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/surface/forum/all/sd-card-still-randomly-disconnects/e2f4b3f2-954b-4b1b-8a02-81029880edd0 for
details). I switched to mass storage driver a few months ago and can assure people with the same problem that it solves the problem.
Now Windows Update has replaced the mass storage driver with a new version of the RealTek driver. So I am faced with a difficult choice between reverting back to the known safe mass storage device driver and taking a chance on the new RealTek ver. 3.0 driver.
I assume Microsoft would not distribute the specialized RealTek driver for the RealTek card reader unless it had some advantage over Microsoft's generic mass storage device driver. On the other hand, the Microsoft Surface folks left the RealTek Version
2.0 card reader driver for years even though it clearly did not work in the Surfaces for any application that needed reliable access to a microSD card. I do a lot of work on battery power. So if the specialized RealTek driver saves energy, then I want to
try it.
Further complicating my dilemma is that the failures of the old RealTek card reader driver were not simple to diagnose. I would typically get two or three failures per week but would often go two or three weeks without a failure. In other words, it would
take weeks for me to be certain that the new driver was safe to rely on. And the inconvenience of a failure is not trivial. It can take hours for the Surface to rebuild corrupted databases.
If I can get some assurance that the new RealTek card reader driver solved the disconnect problem and that it has some meaningful advantage over the generic mass storage device driver, then I'll leave it in place and hope for the best. Otherwise, I'll have
to switch back to the known-safe mass storage device driver without ever knowing if the new version would have been better.
So in summary, What's new in the Ver 3.0 RealTek card reader driver?