Thursday, November 24th 2016

Club 3D Intros USB 3.0 Type-C to DP Dual Monitor MST Hub

Already more than 3 years ago, back in summer 2013, Club 3D did open up a new era by introducing the first Multi Stream Transport Hubs (MST-Hubs) to the worldwide IT market. With the introduction of the DisplayPort 1.2 standard in the beginning of this decade, the Multi Stream Transport Technology was established. The concept of MST was already available before Club 3D developed the solution and was first to bring a MST Hub into the mainstream market. In 2014 we could already introduce the second generation MST-Hubs and create a line of products for Dual-, Triple- and Quad-Monitor usage and even one version with HDMI outputs. The full line up you can find here.

In IT the development never stands still and therefore Club 3D is proud to be ahead in the market again by introducing the first product of the next generation of MST-Hubs today. MST Hub goes Type C it can be called. The Club 3D SenseVision MST Hub USB 3.1 Gen1 Type C to DisplayPort 1.2 Dual Monitor is named CSV-1545. It takes advantage of the very new Type C plug but offers the technology that users are used to from our existing line up of MST Hubs.
This new addition to our portfolio will already be on stock at the end of this week. For more product information please check the text below, visit our webpage or contact your Club 3D sales. Stay tuned with Club 3D. We will be bringing soon the follow up to this range with HDMI support.

SenseVision MST Hub USB 3.1 Gen1 Type C to DisplayPort 1.2 Dual Monitor
Displays have always been a key part of the PC experience. PC Gamers want a more immersive presentation of their gameplay and professionals are seeking for more desktop space to run apps side by side and increase their productivity. The easiest solution is to add multiple monitors to an existing Laptop or Desktop PC.

The SenseVision MST Hub USB 3.1 Gen1 Type C to DisplayPort 1.2 Dual Monitor is an invaluable tool for gaming, multitasking, or simply for the fun of it. The adapter converts the video signal from a single source through USB 3.1 Gen1 Type C and displays it into two DisplayPort outputs for a fast plug and play setup.

This product enables two Displays to be driven independently from a single USB 3.1 Gen1 Type C output with DisplayPort Alt Mode support from the source system. Functionality is also dependent on the capability of the source system.
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12 Comments on Club 3D Intros USB 3.0 Type-C to DP Dual Monitor MST Hub

#1
Toothless
Tech, Games, and TPU!
Get a 3.1 PCI card and have all the monitor.
Posted on Reply
#2
arterius2
ToothlessGet a 3.1 PCI card and have all the monitor.
Huh? What? On your laptop?
Posted on Reply
#3
Toothless
Tech, Games, and TPU!
arterius2Huh? What? On your laptop?
Show me a laptop that you can add in a PCI card for more USB 3.1 ports. Better yet, show me where you can add multiple PCI cards for a huge array of monitors.
Posted on Reply
#4
arterius2
ToothlessShow me a laptop that you can add in a PCI card for more USB 3.1 ports. Better yet, show me where you can add multiple PCI cards for a huge array of monitors.
Exactly. You answered your own question.
Posted on Reply
#5
Toothless
Tech, Games, and TPU!
arterius2Exactly. You answered your own question.
I wasn't talking about laptops at all. I was talking about desktops.
Posted on Reply
#6
arterius2
ToothlessI wasn't talking about laptops at all. I was talking about desktops.
This is likely aimed at laptops, AIOs or SFFs. So your PCI card comment was pointless.
Posted on Reply
#7
Prima.Vera
ToothlessShow me a laptop that you can add in a PCI card for more USB 3.1 ports. Better yet, show me where you can add multiple PCI cards for a huge array of monitors.
ExpressCard ports that all laptops (except stupid Apple) have??
Posted on Reply
#8
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
Prima.VeraExpressCard ports that all laptops (except stupid Apple) have??
I've seen plenty of non-Apple products lately that don't have ExpressCard slots. Even still, none of that matters because this is probably using the implementation of USB Type C that includes a DP signal. You can't really just add that with an ExpressCard adapter because it would need to route all of the display data through it from the GPU when most implementations actually have video output tied to a USB Type C port.
Posted on Reply
#9
Toothless
Tech, Games, and TPU!
arterius2This is likely aimed at laptops, AIOs or SFFs. So your PCI card comment was pointless.
Does it even matter on what it's targeted to when it can work on both? Your comments seem pointless and you're trying to make drama for no reason.
Posted on Reply
#10
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
ToothlessDoes it even matter on what it's targeted to when it can work on both? Your comments seem pointless and you're trying to make drama for no reason.
USB Type C for video is currently pretty exclusive to laptops due to how the port needs to be wired up to both GPUs display outputs as well as USB 2.0 and 3.1 connections. It's not like this is something that's routed through PCI-E. The only time that would mean anything for a desktop is if you had a GPU that provided display output via a USB Type C port but, just because it's USB Type C doesn't mean it has to output a DP or HDMI signal. I suspect that if a dGPU or iGPU on a desktop had this, it would be paired with a USB 3.1 controller.

With that said, I think we'll see this on iGPUs and laptops a lot faster than we'll see it on desktop dGPUs.
Posted on Reply
#11
arterius2
Prima.VeraExpressCard ports that all laptops (except stupid Apple) have??
I thought they were being phased out years ago.I think you'd be hard pressed to find any new laptops that has an express card slot these days.
Posted on Reply
#12
Toothless
Tech, Games, and TPU!
AquinusUSB Type C for video is currently pretty exclusive to laptops due to how the port needs to be wired up to both GPUs display outputs as well as USB 2.0 and 3.1 connections. It's not like this is something that's routed through PCI-E. The only time that would mean anything for a desktop is if you had a GPU that provided display output via a USB Type C port but, just because it's USB Type C doesn't mean it has to output a DP or HDMI signal. I suspect that if a dGPU or iGPU on a desktop had this, it would be paired with a USB 3.1 controller.

With that said, I think we'll see this on iGPUs and laptops a lot faster than we'll see it on desktop dGPUs.
Eyy thank you for explaining this instead of shitposting. I wonder if we'll see something like this for desktops instead of using multiple GPUs.
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