Monday, September 5th 2011
HighPoint Launches Cost-Effective, Dual-Port USB 3.0 5Gb/s HBA
HighPoint Technologies, Inc., an industry leading HBA and storage solutions manufacturer, launches the first of its Dual-Port 5Gb/s USB 3.0 HBA's, the RocketU 1022A. These low-cost, PCI-E 2.0 x1 USB 3.0 SuperSpeed HBA's are ideal upgrades for any desktop PC, and are well-suited for a variety of external storage configurations.
The Introduction of the low-cost Dual Port RocketU USB 3.0 HBA's is in keeping with Highpoint's long standing reputation as the manufacturer of choice for cost-effective, cutting-edge storage HBA's. The RocketU 1022A is a PCI-E 2.0 x1 USB 3.0 SuperSpeed HBA and delivers 5Gb/s of transfer bandwidth. The two type-A ports have been designed to deliver optimal performance for USB 3.0 hard drives and SSD's, and are suited for a wide-range of applications including portable/removable storage, storage expansion, personal media libraries, and backup solutions.Upgrade any PC with USB 3.0 External Storage
The RocketU 1022A an ideal, low-cost upgrade for any Windows or Linux PC, and has been optimized for external SSD and hard drive configurations.
The RocketU 1022A is fully backwards compatible with every generation of external USB drives and enclosures, and can be easily installed into any free PCI-Express Gen 2.0/Gen 1.0 x1, x4, x8 or x16 slot. Driver support is readily available for all major Microsoft operating systems including 32 and 64-bit versions of Windows 7, 2008 and Vista. The RocketU 1022A is xHCI compliant, and is natively supported by current Linux distributions.
Availability
HighPoint RocketU HBA's are available immediately, from a world-wide network of Distribution and Resellers.
The Introduction of the low-cost Dual Port RocketU USB 3.0 HBA's is in keeping with Highpoint's long standing reputation as the manufacturer of choice for cost-effective, cutting-edge storage HBA's. The RocketU 1022A is a PCI-E 2.0 x1 USB 3.0 SuperSpeed HBA and delivers 5Gb/s of transfer bandwidth. The two type-A ports have been designed to deliver optimal performance for USB 3.0 hard drives and SSD's, and are suited for a wide-range of applications including portable/removable storage, storage expansion, personal media libraries, and backup solutions.Upgrade any PC with USB 3.0 External Storage
The RocketU 1022A an ideal, low-cost upgrade for any Windows or Linux PC, and has been optimized for external SSD and hard drive configurations.
The RocketU 1022A is fully backwards compatible with every generation of external USB drives and enclosures, and can be easily installed into any free PCI-Express Gen 2.0/Gen 1.0 x1, x4, x8 or x16 slot. Driver support is readily available for all major Microsoft operating systems including 32 and 64-bit versions of Windows 7, 2008 and Vista. The RocketU 1022A is xHCI compliant, and is natively supported by current Linux distributions.
Availability
HighPoint RocketU HBA's are available immediately, from a world-wide network of Distribution and Resellers.
14 Comments on HighPoint Launches Cost-Effective, Dual-Port USB 3.0 5Gb/s HBA
www.msi.com/product/mb/Star-USB3.html#?div=Overview
and something the same with Highpoints name on it probably around $50's
I got my MSI star 3.0 PCI card last spring for about 20 euro, together with a Samsung S2 640 GB (supposedly 7200rpm) and have been loving the combination. The external drive doesnt work noticably slower then my internal harddrive, at least not writing and reading speeds.
But who knows maybe they'll sell it for under 20$.
and you paid more than me for the MSI jobbie your 20 euro's works out to be NZD $31.67
I got mine for only $29.95
This 2-Port card isn't anything special though, just a standard 2-Port card with a single controller. So I can't see this being priced more than $30.
As for them pricing their products high just because of the name, I have to disagree. Their budget RAID cards are quit nicely price, and extremely good too.
$120 gets you the 4-Port RocketRAID 2300 w/ RAID 0/1/5/10 + JBOD.
You can get a SYBA 4-Port card, but the two cards they offer are shit. One is an old PCI chip with a PCI to PCI-E bridge chip. The other uses a 2-Port SATA II/2 Port IDE chip, with two ATA to SATA I ports to give the 4-Ports, oh and both of these cards are limitted to the RAID configurations the offer.
Adaptect offers a 4-Port card for $100, but it uses a weaker RAID controller that doesn't offer RAID 5 or JBOD.
So yes, I call $120 for a full feature 4-port card a nice price.
www.ebay.com/itm/PCI-e-PCI-Express-USB3-0-Card-ASMEDIA-1042-chipset-/330579002296?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4cf80b43b8
www.ebay.com/itm/PCI-e-PCI-Express-USB3-0-2port-Card-ASMEDIA1042-chipset-/330574678047?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4cf7c9481f
www.ebay.com/itm/1-port-PCI-Express-USB-3-0-Extender-Adapter-Card-/170655539432?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item27bbdce0e8
www.ebay.com/itm/2-Port-USB-3-0-HUB-PCI-E-Expresscard-Card-Adapter-/180642650149?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item2a0f241825
are they real at those prices?
Even your original comparison was utter crap. You compared the Highpoint 620, which is a SATA III card w/ full RAID 0/1/5/10 + JBOD support, to a generic off brand SATA II card with only RAID 0/1... Plus everywhere that lists the ST-Lab A341 for sale only lists support for XP/2003, with no mention of Vista/7. Does it even work with modern operating systems? I tried to find out. So I went over to ST-Lab's site and started looking for the manual. After searching for the model number on their site, I got nothing. Finally I got lucky and found it in their horrible product list under "PCIe SATA II 300 2CHANNEL (2P+2P) CARD". Awesome, that makes it easy to find.:rolleyes: The manaual does mention Vista support(no mention of 64-bit support at all though). I tried to get to the driver download page, but that section of their site seems to be down, so I don't know what drivers are avaialble. So, yeah, it might be cheaper. But not only is it a lower end product, but the support for it is utter shit as well. No wonder it is cheaper.:ohwell: