Thursday, June 25th 2015
Addonics Announces the Super Fast and Inexpensive USB 3.1 Controller
Addonics Technologies today announced the Addonics USB 3.1 PCIe controller, a simple and economical solution for adding the latest high speed 10 Gbps USB 3.1 port to desktop computers or servers.
Designed to install into any PCI-Express 2X slot, the USB 3.1 controller can handle data rates up to 10 Gbps on the PCIe 2.0, doubling the speed of USB 3.1.
One of the key features is a maximum speed of 10 Gbits/sec, which is twice the speed of USB 3.0 and 20 times the speed of USB 2.0. It is capable of SuperSpeed (10 Gbps, 5Gbps), HighSpeed (480 Mbps), FullSpeed (12 Mbps), and LowSpeed (1.5 Mbps) transactions.The new USB product is hot swappable, which means a drive can be removed and added without system shut down or restart. It accesses two USB 3.1 ports via the PCI-Express (PCIe) 2-lane slot and supports both PCIe 1.0, 2.0 or 3.0. The USB 3.1 controller is compatible with Windows 7, 8.1, 10 and Windows servers.
The MSRP starts at $29.99. For more information visit this page.
Designed to install into any PCI-Express 2X slot, the USB 3.1 controller can handle data rates up to 10 Gbps on the PCIe 2.0, doubling the speed of USB 3.1.
One of the key features is a maximum speed of 10 Gbits/sec, which is twice the speed of USB 3.0 and 20 times the speed of USB 2.0. It is capable of SuperSpeed (10 Gbps, 5Gbps), HighSpeed (480 Mbps), FullSpeed (12 Mbps), and LowSpeed (1.5 Mbps) transactions.The new USB product is hot swappable, which means a drive can be removed and added without system shut down or restart. It accesses two USB 3.1 ports via the PCI-Express (PCIe) 2-lane slot and supports both PCIe 1.0, 2.0 or 3.0. The USB 3.1 controller is compatible with Windows 7, 8.1, 10 and Windows servers.
The MSRP starts at $29.99. For more information visit this page.
17 Comments on Addonics Announces the Super Fast and Inexpensive USB 3.1 Controller
Yeah, no buy for me.
Empirically speaking prices of USB 3.1 cards from Asus, ASRock and generic ones on Newegg and Amazon are more expensive in the ~$40+ range. Also with the generic ones you have to pay attention to the specs because they may describe it as "USB 3.1 Type-C" but it may only be capable of 5Gbps,....
The thing that I find a bit puzzling is that Asus, for example, seems to stipulate the need for a motherboard BIOS upgrade for proper support for their USB 3.1 add-in cards and they specify supported motherboard models.
I have no need of a USB 3.1 add-in card now but when I do decide to upgrade to one I would probably just go with the one on offer by my motherboard manufacturer rather then to go with a generic or third-party solution.
Doesn't PCI-E give 75 Watts?
PCIe only provides 12V and 3.3V, but USB needs 5V. To get 5V on the card, you can either implement a DC-DC converter on the PCIe slot's 12V or 3.3V lines, or you can put in an external power connector and use the 5V produced by the main power supply. The latter is cheaper, which is why you see external power connectors on these cards.
Well gotta read the small print
* To achieve the maximum throughput, the PCI-Express slot must be version 2.0 or higher. Older Notebook with PCI-Express 1.0 will limit the speed to 5 Gbps. Performance per port may decrease if both ports are transferring data simultaneously due to the limited throughput of the PCI-Express slot. Please visit following web page for more information of PCI-Express v1.0 and v2.0
All of this makes perfect sense to me. However, I would have wanted 2 more ports and actually have them use those last two PCI-E lanes that are going un-used. :eek:
(Note how specs say they use only 2 PCI-E lanes when the form factor is for 4x.)
Alternatives are
Asus 90mc0360-m0eay0
LogiLink pc0080
Asrock
Sharkoon
and the Asrock and Sharkoon cards look pretty similar to the Addonics card in layout with the additional sata power connector to power devices requesting more than 500mA.