Kensington SD5700T Thunderbolt 4 Docking Station review Power via the host Thunderbolt 4 port also slightly increases, from 90W to 96W, but it’s also $50 more expensive. In the US there is another variant model, the Kensington SD5780T dock, that drops one of the three downstream Thunderbolt 4 ports in favor of an HDMI 2.1 port-so is maybe aimed more at the PC market where Thunderbolt is less prevalent a feature as it is for Macs. We think paying a little extra for this dock is worthwhile, especially when you factor in the three-year warranty. There are useful lights telling you when the dock is powered and when it’s connected, and we like the On/Off button, too. Three Thunderbolt 4 ports (40Gbps, 15W)Īs you’d expect from Kensington, the SD5700T Thunderbolt 4 Docking Station is a quality build with everything a dock should have: four TB4 ports, three fast USB-A and one slow one (that at least boasts 7.5W charging power compared to the faster USB-A 3.2 Gen 2 ports’ 4.5W), Gigabit Ethernet, SD Card reader, and audio jack.Īt 180W, the power supply is the best we’ve seen in all our hub and dock tests-great if you are powering multiple devices connected to the dock. ![]()
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