
USB-C Thunderbolt Dock Review
4.4 / 5
Overall Rating
A capable mid-tier Thunderbolt dock handling dual-4K + Ethernet + power delivery. Half the price of the CalDigit TS4 with comparable capability for most workflows.
USB-C Thunderbolt Dock — Review
Mobile SMB operators with a MacBook Pro or Thunderbolt-capable Windows laptop live and die by their dock. A good dock: one cable between laptop and desk, dual monitors wake up, Ethernet connects, power delivers at 85-100W, peripherals work.
What The Dock Does Well
Dual 4K at 60Hz. Both DisplayPort outputs handle native 4K60 without frame drops. Tested with an LG 27UK850 and a Dell U2720Q — clean for a full day of use.
Power delivery. 85W upstream charges a MacBook Pro 14" at full speed under load. The 16" may need MagSafe separately under intensive loads.
Ethernet. Gigabit performs as expected (~940 Mbps real-world). For Zoom calls where Wi-Fi congestion is an issue, wired handoff is instant and stable.
SD card reader. UHS-II support means fast camera card transfers.
Where It Falls Short
Fan noise under load. When charging and driving dual 4K simultaneously, the dock's internal fan kicks on. Audible from 2-3 ft in a quiet room.
Wake-from-sleep quirks. Some morning wakes require unplugging and replugging the Thunderbolt cable to restore both monitors. Current firmware: ~10% of the time.
No separate USB-C downstream port. All downstream ports are USB-A.
Compared To Premium
CalDigit TS4 ($400+) has zero wake-from-sleep issues, silent operation, all USB-C downstream. For most operators, this mid-tier covers 95% of capability at half the price.
Who Should Buy
SMB operators running MacBook Pro with dual external 4K monitors. Budget between $150-$250.
Who Should Skip
Anyone running triple 4K or higher. Anyone with zero tolerance for wake-quirks.
Verdict
Capable mid-tier. Not the quietest, not the most flawless, but the price-to-capability ratio is excellent for the target workflow.
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