- The Cable Matters Thunderbolt 4 cable features the newest Thunderbolt cable and USB 4 cable standards in one product; Take advantage of the new Thunderbolt 4 40Gbps connector with this all-in-one Thunderbolt 4 cable and USB4 cable with support for both cable standards
- Certified Thunderbolt 4 cable supports the latest Thunderbolt 4 features and performance with unmatched simplicity and reliability; Enjoy reliable 40Gbps data transfer on all Thunderbolt 4 devices; Power and charge devices with Power Delivery 3.0 100W charging support
- Thunderbolt cable 4 features enough bandwidth to drive one 8K display or two 4K displays; Connect the latest high-definition monitors and TVs for vibrant, crystal-clear 8K video and authentic high-quality audio
- Backward compatible Thunderbolt 4 to Thunderbolt 3 cable features full backward compatibility with Thunderbolt 3 cable standards and Thunderbolt 3 devices and hosts; Replace your Thunderbolt cable with a new one that fully supports the latest features to future proof your setup
- Future-proofed Thunderbolt 4 cable also functions as a USB4 cable, with support for the latest USB4 standard; Connect USB4 devices and transfer up to 40Gbps of data depending on host and device USB4 support; USB-C cable is also fully backward compatible with USB-C 3.2, 3.1, and 2.0 speeds and devices, and supports USB-C features such as DisplayPort Alt Mode (DP Alt Mode) and USB Power Delivery (USB-PD). Fully compatible with iPad Pro and MacBook Pro
[Prime] Cable Matters Thunderbolt 4 Cable 0.8m (Intel Certified, 40Gbps, 100W) $27.19 Delivered @ Cable Matters Amazon AU
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Does the USB-IF certification with this 2m cable vs the Intel certification on the OP matter?
Good question. I dont know the answer to that, but I've found something that might answer it below
https://www.reddit.com/r/UsbCHardware/comments/13418w7/are_p…
"The problem may happen when you try this combination:
Thunderbolt 3 Host + Thunderbolt 3/4 Dock or device + USB4 cable.
The Thunderbolt 3 host was invented before the USB4 spec was written, so it doesn't understand what "0x3" means in the "USB Speed" field. It's looking for the 0x8087 object. If it's not there, it will assume the cable can only do 20Gbps instead of 40Gbps.
I noticed this, and the change I submitted to USB Type-C was to require all 40Gbps passive cables include the 0x8087 object for backward compatibility."
Basically I think the Intel Certified might cover you in the above scenario. For Thunderbolt 4 scenarios, either cables should give you the advertised performance
This might help - https://www.tomsguide.com/features/thunderbolt-4-vs-usb4-wha…
If only it has the stress relief bits, probably start to fray after a while
Buy ⌀10mm heat shrink tube in jaycar, cut, pull over the connector, use lighter on it, done. May repeat for 2 layers :)
That protects the connector a bit from bending but doesn’t really provide a lot of mechanical strength. You could use the glue infused heatshrink and it’d be better.
These are nice cables in my experience. Idk if they are worth the money, but there's probably value in never having to worry about random compatibility issues.
There's a 2m cable, same specs but cheaper at $22.99 here
https://www.amazon.com.au/gp/product/B0CQPNXH7Q/