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Posted 20 hours ago

Kensington SD4700P USB-C or USB-A - 60W PD - Dual Display Docking Station with Power Delivery for Windows PC's, Surface Pro, Surface Laptops, and MacBooks - TAA Compliant (K38240NA)

£9.9£99Clearance
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About this deal

On the rear is a PSU power input, USB-C downlink from the computer, three each of DisplayPort 1.2 and HDMI 2.0, a Gigabit LAN port and four USB-A 3.1 Gen2 ports.

DisplayPort++/HDMI to provide flexible video connections with support up to 2560x1600 for a single monitor or 2048x1152 for dual monitors using DisplayLink. Video ports: 1 x HDMI v1.3 and 1 x DisplayPort v1.1 ++ (Passive cables/adapters for HDMI or DVI conversion) Mounting Option: VESA Mount Compatible: Mounting plate (K33959WW) for 75mm or 100mm VESA layouts sold separatelySystem requirements: USB-C host device must support Power Delivery. Power Delivery is not supported on USB-A host devices. Ethernet Speed (Mbps): 10, 100, 1000 Actual Ethernet speeds may vary depending on, but not limited to, Internet bandwidth, Ethernet cables, network switches, and the hardware and firmware performance of the host computer. The obvious conclusion is that this isn’t practical, or at least some significant compromises are required in what you can realistically connect and how it might work. If you don’t have USB-C and are using the provided USB-A to USB-C cable that Kensington kindly includes, then a maximum of two 4K displays is possible.

Your device must be running Windows 10, 8.1 or Mac OS X Yosemite (10.10) or later, or Chrome OS (R53 or above).Dual video is only supported on Windows 10 and 8.1 devices (Mac and Chrome USB-C devices do not support dual video over MST). Maximum Resolution Supported: Single Monitor - 2560 x 1600 @ 60Hz and Dual Monitors - 2048 x 1152 @ 60Hz Our experience of DisplayLink hasn’t been great, we’ll admit. Because it requires some significant processing on the PC, how much bandwidth it uses can vary wildly depending on the amount of change occurring, and most laptops don’t have the spare performance to drive it properly.

Maximum resolution supported: single monitor - 2560 x 1600 @ 60Hz and dual monitors - 2048 x 1152 @ 60HzQ: How does my USB-C cable know what device I have and what functions the USB-C port on my device can perform? Maximum Resolution Supported: USB-C Alt Mode Device: Video 1: 3840 x 2160 @ 30Hz (@60Hz w/ DP1.4++) // Video 2 & 3: 3840 x 2160 @ 60Hz AND USB-C (non-Alt Mode) and USB-A Devices: Video 1: (n/a) // Video 2 & 3: 3840 x 2160 @ 60Hz

At a rough estimate, the ports on this device would require more than 76Gb/s of connection to the host computer to have all the necessary bandwidth, and it only has 10Gb/s. System requirements: USB-C host device must support power delivery. Power delivery is not supported on USB 3.0 host devices How well this works for any specific user is entirely dependent on many factors, such as the laptop host hardware, the resolutions of the monitors and the amount of motion on the displays.And the other caveat to this hardware is the charging. The 60 watts provided isn’t enough power for charging the more powerful Ultrabook’s, like the 15-inch Apple MacBook Pro. Best For: USB-C Laptops & Ultrabooks that support Power Delivery and Monitors that support up to 4K USB-C Ports: 1 x USB-C 3.2 Gen1 Port: (rear) does not support USB-C Alt mode. Supports USB bus power up to 15W System Requirements: USB-C host device must support Power Delivery. Power Delivery is not supported on USB 3.0 host devices.

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