This was posted 1 year 5 months 20 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Satechi USB4 Multiport Adapter - with 8K HDMI - $31.49 (RRP $249) + Delivery ($0 with Prime/ $39 Spend) @ Satechi Amazon AU

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First time post and looks to be a great deal - Get in quick!
Satechi USB4 Multiport Adapter - USB-C PD Charging, Gigabit Ethernet, USB-C Data, up to 8K HDMI – for M2/ M1 MacBook Pro/Air, M2/ M1 iPad Pro/Air, M2 Mac Mini, iMac M1 (space grey)

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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closed Comments

  • Not adding to cart.

  • +1

    Obvious pricing error…..gone.

  • it was there for a few moments. Good deal but missed out.

  • wow!

  • Already unvailable.

  • Wow, they went quickly. I hope those that managed to order, get them fulfilled.

  • +6
    • it doesnt support 8K

    • Thanks, guttered I missed out on the original deal but I got this for $28.91 with a 30% discount (which seems to have gone now?)

    • +1

      V2 seems to be only using USB 3.2 Gen1 (10Gbps) while the original deal is USB 4 (40Gbps)
      thats a massive difference and the reason why it doesn't support 8k

      There are many options for USB 3.2 Gen1 hub and many are under $40
      eg. https://www.amazon.com.au/WAVLINK-Delivery-Adapter-Chromeboo…

      • The images of the original deal only show USB 3.2. From where did you get that USB 4?

        • The original deal says "Satechi USB4 Multiport Adapter"
          The description of the item says "Data Transfer Rate 40 Gigabits Per Second, 104 Megabits Per Second, 10 Gigabits Per Second"

          Only USB4 can achieve 40Gbps

        • In order to provide both the video output, and data, that USB 4 bandwidth needs to be divided. Generally, USB 3.2 gen 2 is its upper limit with 4K/60Hz or 8K/30Hz support. However, a proper USB 4 dock would support multiple monitors and/or daisy chaining. That original "USB 4" hub does feel a bit dodgy. It doesn't make sense to put a USB 4 chipset in it, and does it in a way that is like USB-C hub/dongle except it does provide more bandwidth to the USB-A ports. The original deal feels like it is just a USB 4 hub (assuming it is actually a proper USB 4 hub) but all the cool high end features are removed.

          • @netsurfer: is it still better than most usb c hubs ?

          • @netsurfer: Search and found the actual product page
            https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B09PQ9X2F4#:~:text=to%20zoom%20…

            Seems the only real benefit of this USB4 hub is one single 8k 30hz HDMI output
            and a shared 10Gbps USB-A bus?

            • @littlesoldier: It is still odd because normally, with a proper Thunderbolt 4 / USB 4 docking station:

              • You get 2 x 6K @ 60Hz or 1 x 8K @60Hz, whereas that one is basically (4K @ 60Hz or 8K @ 30Hz).
              • Zero Thunderbolt 4 / USB 4 pass through support.
              • USB-PD pass through, while that makes sense for cheaper USB-C hub, it is not a good idea for Thunderbolt 4 / USB 4 because of the docking station's extra power requirement.

              I am a bit cynical about that device being real Thunderbolt 4 / USB 4 device. Normally, a proper USB 4 or Thunderbolt 3/4 chipset is expensive so it is silly to put one in there and then cripple so much.

      • Original one is a bit weird. Specs wise, it appears to be USB 4, but only in the sense that it supports USB 3.2 gen 2 (10Gbps) USB-A ports. No daisy chain benefit and USB PD 2.0 support is iffy for 100W (it is okay for Apple devices, but may have issue with some Windows devices). If I am being cynical, I would suspect it has incorrect spec listed. It is basically a USB-C hub/dock with bare minimum benefit.

        V2 is standard USB-C dongle with USB-C/DP 1.4 support so it does USB 3.2 gen 1 (5Gbps) only.

    • +2

      Showing $111 for me!

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