Wednesday, September 12th 2012

ELSA Announces Thunderbolt PCI-Express Expansion Box

Run out of expansion slots in your system? Bulky graphics cards eating into smaller PCI-Express x1/x4 slots for devices such as PCIe SSDs, sound cards, and other expansion cards? ELSA has a solution for you, provided you have a Thunderbolt port to spare. The company announced the MAGMA ExpressBox 3T, an external add-on card enclosure, which talks to its host over Thunderbolt.

The MAGMA ExpressBox 3T encloses three standard expansion card bays, with two open-ended PCI-Express 2.0 x8 slots and a PCI-Express 2.0 x4. The three can be used for PCI-Express add-on cards of nearly every electrical configuration. The enclosure packs its own 250W power supply. It features two Thunderbolt ports, with which it can be a part of a larger Thunderbolt device daisy-chain, letting you conserve the limited number of Thunderbolt ports in your system. The enclosure is PC and Mac-compatible. Measuring 371 x 200 x 110 mm (WxDxH), the enclosure is made of aluminum panels with a steel frame. The company did not reveal pricing or availability information.
Source: Hermitage Akihabara
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7 Comments on ELSA Announces Thunderbolt PCI-Express Expansion Box

#1
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
Nice. How quick is Thunderbolt again?
Posted on Reply
#2
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
FrickNice. How quick is Thunderbolt again?
20Gb/s, bi-directional. Each link is 10Gb/s.
Posted on Reply
#4
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
What's really neat is when ThunderBolt sends data to the cable, it actually two different streams of data. There is a multiplexer/decoder on both ends of a thunderbolt cable that multiplexes the signal on each end shoving more data over thunderbolt. If you ever notice why your ThunderBolt cable gets warm (I do, I have one at work for imaging our newer Mac laptops,) that is why. The cable does a little more than just enable data to be sent back and forth, it's changing it to send it back and forth. :p

Posted on Reply
#5
Nordic
AquinusWhat's really neat is when ThunderBolt sends data to the cable, it actually two different streams of data. There is a multiplexer/decoder on both ends of a thunderbolt cable that multiplexes the signal on each end shoving more data over thunderbolt. If you ever notice why your ThunderBolt cable gets warm (I do, I have one at work for imaging our newer Mac laptops,) that is why. The cable does a little more than just enable data to be sent back and forth, it's changing it to send it back and forth. :p

www.techpowerup.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=48394&stc=1&d=1347447808
That is cool
Posted on Reply
#6
cadaveca
My name is Dave
AquinusWhat's really neat is when ThunderBolt sends data to the cable, it actually two different streams of data. There is a multiplexer/decoder on both ends of a thunderbolt cable that multiplexes the signal on each end shoving more data over thunderbolt. If you ever notice why your ThunderBolt cable gets warm (I do, I have one at work for imaging our newer Mac laptops,) that is why. The cable does a little more than just enable data to be sent back and forth, it's changing it to send it back and forth. :p

www.techpowerup.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=48394&stc=1&d=1347447808
ALso explains why the cables are so expensive. This is much better than DisplayPort cables that cost a lot, but for an unknown reason.
Posted on Reply
#7
Huddo93
Something like this would be awesome if you did a miniITX build with 1 expansion slot (used for graphics card) but still wanted to use a pci wireless card and a soundcard to, if the price is right. Surely this product is going to cost a fortune though :(
Posted on Reply
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