RadioDaveAz—June 1, 2025✓ Verified purchase
I just finished building my new PC as my old perfectly capable Windows 10 PC Microsoft was deemed incompatible with Windows 11! As I built my old PC in 2013, I had to get my techy 18 year old grandson to help me select parts. The case I bought is a good one but to my dismay the front USB ports are on the bottom of the case! Due to my existing multiple USB plus other cables in the rear, I had to set the PC on the floor (on a new roller platform). This made USB access for cables/devices that can vary every day (I.E. Cell Phone) troublesome for an 82 year old man. This extender is the perfect solution of convenience and performance for my day to day USB Type A needs. I have it connected to a USB A 3.2 10GB (Red) port in the rear of the PC. The extender ports are the same. I have double sticked attached the the top of the front top of the PC. Read more
Francy—June 29, 2025✓ Verified purchase
So far works well. My front USB panel stopped working so I purchased this to try. It works nicely. Nice long cord Read more
Nunia Bizness—October 29, 2024✓ Verified purchase
Can't handle multiple NVMes, even with the extra power. 1 or 2, but more than that and you're pushing your luck. Otherwise a great product, I just heavily burden my 10G USB ports. Read more
done—February 10, 2026✓ Verified purchase
so far so good! $ system_profiler SPUSBDataType USB: USB 3.1 Bus: Host Controller Driver: AppleT8103USBXHCI USB 3.1 Bus: Host Controller Driver: AppleT8103USBXHCI USB 3.0 Bus: Host Controller Driver: AppleEmbeddedUSBXHCIFL1100 PCI Device ID: 0x1100 PCI Revision ID: 0x0010 PCI Vendor ID: 0x1b73 USB3.1 Hub : Product ID: 0x0822 Vendor ID: 0x2109 (VIA Labs, Inc.) Version: 2.13 Serial Number: 000000001 Speed: Up to 5 Gb/s Manufacturer: VIA Labs, Inc. Location ID: 0x02600000 / 14 Current Available (mA): 900 Current Required (mA): 0 Extra Operating Current (mA): 0 Read more
Bruowbie—January 8, 2026✓ Verified purchase
I bought the hub so I could add some more usb ports avaliable on my pc. Works well, easy installation. Read more
JEF GRAY—June 17, 2024✓ Verified purchase
Small footprint, sturdy and works great. Can plug and play USB from the desk without having to reach behind the PC. Perfect for the laptop when on the road. Charges everything fine. Would buy again, good value. Read more
James E.—June 26, 2024✓ Verified purchase
Like the no extra power feature. Works great Read more
Strangers with Candy—December 19, 2024✓ Verified purchase
Edit 1 year later - It's just more instant landfill from (you-know-where). I originally gave this a glowing review with more detail than I usually write (or was probably needed) because I felt like it perhaps was one of those products that had a lot of room for error (using the wrong wattage power brick, this USB 3.2 Gen1 x2 garbage that literally no consumers understand, and USB-C inconsistency) but when used properly with compatible hardware and ports it was actually a decent product. The problem lies with the half-wits that set USB industry standards and their ever-changing classifications that become even more confusing with each change, then, to really mess with people, they make changes retroactive. Then they throw USB-C on the pile with no set industry standards for manufacturers, making USB-C ports on devices that could be anything between Thunderbolt4/USB4 (8k video/DP-alt mode/PD/10+ gbps data) or it could be a plain old USB 3.0 data only port made in the C size (no video/no DP-alt mode/no PD/bring-a-book speed). Confusing legions of consumers purchasing USB-C dock/hubs/peripherals/displays/etc. and are surprised when the USB-C cord into the USB-C port on their laptop andn it doesn't work like it should, or not at all. While all of those things are still true and plague consumers, this is just more junk for the pile. Last maybe 6 months before it started randomly disconnecting and reconnecting then it moved on to making Windows throw the "USB Device is Unrecognized" error we all so loath to the point that it now does that 100% of the time rendering the device useless junk. Sure, it was an inexpensive item, but I'm tired of being sold garbage, literally. I don't care how cheap it was, I expect more than 6 months of light home office use before it starts failing. To make matters worse, if you try to contact the seller for product support or to inquire about the warranty they claim to offer, it is noted that Amazon handles customer service for the seller which amounts to generic "troubleshooting" steps followed by nothing. It is assumed those canned "is it plugged in?" steps will fix you up. If you back out of that dead-end and skip “troubleshooting” (just always skip it, it's worthless for any product I've ever tried), you are given a link to the manufacturer to get technical support. Great, now we are getting somewhere...and it's a 404 page not found error. That's it, that's all there is. End, Fin. There is no path forward in the process. To recap ---> Seller? "eh, talk to Amazon" ---> Amazon? "eh, is it plugged in? This is hard, talk to the manufacturer" ---> Manufacturer? 404 page not found. Now what? 5 stars is officially retracted and retroactive. 1 star is the correct rank. The mark of failure for a product/seller. To mirror the failure of the USB hub, the failure to have any product support and failure to honour warranty by-way-of obfuscation. Enjoy! ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Original Review - for posterity and if anyone cares I'm giving 5 stars even though this 4 port hub has some limitations. I think expectations need to be properly set is the key here This is a simple 4 port USB A 3.2 port splitter, I think calling it a hub implies something more robust than this device actually is No, you aren't going to be able to use this as a docking station, but it's not meant to be. It's a run of the mill port splitter that happens to also have a unique (to its size and price point) feature - a USB C port for no reason other than providing power to the device itself. Not to be confused with "PD/power delivery" or "passthrough" where you plug your laptop power supply into the hub, then the hub pssses through the power to the laptop thereby allowing the data and video functions to still be used from that laptop's USB C port that otherwise would have been monopolized by the power supply alone. This is not that. Okay now that we aren't comparing apples with oranges I'll tell you why I like this so much that I ended buying 4. This is a cheap and easy way to externally power your external SSDs. When I upgrade an NVMe SSD to a larger size in my PCs I keep the old one, then buy a *compatible* USB enclosure, pop it in and then it becomes a super fast and easily portable external drive. Also, no separate power supply is needed since SSDs need such little power the current from the USB connection is usually enough. Usually. If you're connecting to a desk top PC then you're golden, you're not going to need external power for USB attached SSDs *but* if you are using a laptop then it's a different story. Laptops are made to be as light and efficient as possible with most machines using 45w or 65w power supplies with performance models sometimes up to 90w. Compared to a desktop that's not a lot This means that USB power output from a laptop port is limited to what's left over after it takes what it needs to run. Usually, enough power left over to send out through the USB ports to supply the connected peripherals. These are typically low powered items like mouse, keyboard, and perhaps an external drive (CD/SSD/flash drive, etc.). But if you're like me and have like 4 or 5 mouse/keyboard dongles and 3 SSDs spread over 2 USB hubs all crammed into the only 2 USB ports on my laptop, then you're going to start having issues with keeping all the devices plus your laptop satiated with that finite amount of juice from those little 45w/65w/90w power supply. You're computer's performance will degrade noticably as it throttles itself to keep power usage down so that your periferals won't start doing weird stuff, if they work at all. You have a few options - 1) only keep one SSD plugged in at a time, which isn't practical, 2) get a proper, fully self-powered docking station with plenty of juice to feed everything simultaneously, but those are $$$ not cheap (some even costing as much or more than the laptop), or 3) buy a couple of these suckers. probably went overboard but I got one for each drive (and only a single drive per hub to essentially give them all of their own power supplies (and I have a 4th hub that I plug all my dongles into together since those are all such low power}. Since I've gone to this setup, my performance issues have gone away due to no more throttling, my mice/keyboards don't have erratic behavior and the speed of the USB SSDs have ncreased dramatically. *I would avoid using more than one drive per hub because for some reason, even when fully powered, both drives read/write speeds tank, although both are still usable no problem, just slow is all. Read more