- Joined
- Feb 11, 2021
- Messages
- 9 (0.01/day)
System Name | AMDPC |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X |
Motherboard | Gigabyte X570 Aorus Master rev 1.2 |
Cooling | NZXT Kraken X73 |
Memory | 2*16GB G.Skill Trident Z Neo [F4-3600C16-16GTZNC] |
Video Card(s) | XFX Speedster MERC 319 RX 6800 XT CORE Gaming [RX-68XTALFD9] |
Storage | NVMe: WD_BLACK SN850 1TB, 960 EVO 1TB, 970 PRO 512GB; SATA: 860 EVO 2TB |
Display(s) | Samsung 34" G5 Odyssey [LC34G55T] |
Case | Lian Li O11 Dynamic XL |
Audio Device(s) | Headphone setup: Schiit Modi 2 Multibit + ifi iCAN SE + HIFIMAN Sundara; Desktop speaker: Kanto YU2 |
Power Supply | Corsair HX1200i |
Mouse | Razer Basilisk Ultimate |
Keyboard | GMMK Pro [QMK/Vial firmware] |
VR HMD | Oculus Rift |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
My motherboard is the Gigabyte Aorus Master X570, but this will apply to several if not all of their models, and perhaps it will apply to other motherboard manufacturers, and other types of devices too.
We all know the USB naming convention has been confusing (to say the least) and has changed in stupid ways over the years, and as such we're often left with having to look things up on the interweb to double check things in order to know which port a device actually has and so forth. It has certainly been like this for me.
This evening I wanted to test something with an external drive I have, and I realised I didn't know for sure exactly which versions of USB ports my motherboard has. I then spent a good few hours working out what those specs are as Gigabyte has not accurately labelled the USB ports anywhere in their documentation (at least that I could find). It appears as a small mislabelling, but it's exactly the kind of mislabelling that makes it impossible to understand which USB version each port has, except the USB 2.0 ports. I came across a review which had described each ports specs (thanks to kitguru.net) and was then able to settle the issue. Also, what I don't understand is why Gigabyte don't write the ports' speeds anywhere, for example on their website, as marketing info. This would have solved the whole problem.
I have attached an image of my motherboard's back plate with the ports named the simple way and their speeds. I have also listed the ways USB ports are labelled, adapted from wikipedia and USB-IF. As you can see, leaving out the x 1 or x 2 part of the version name in columns 'Also named 1' & 'Also named 2 ' makes it impossible to know which USB version one actually has at hand. This is what Gigabyte do.
(Please correct me if I have made mistakes anywhere in this post, as it sure wouldn't be useful with even more confusion!)
Anyway, hope this helps someone at some point not having to spend several hours of their evening figuring out something that shouldn't take more than the time it takes looking up the product on the manufacturer's website. What an incredibly idiotic thing it is to not write at least the ports' speed numbers. One should think that marketing mumbojumbo theoretical speed numbers sells more products than naming conventions nobody understands without digging into wiki pages, and then on top of that using them wrong. It's just makes no sense whatsoever.
USB versions, their speeds, and their different naming conventions:
My motherboard's backplate, the correct USB versions and Gigabyte's labelling underneath:
We all know the USB naming convention has been confusing (to say the least) and has changed in stupid ways over the years, and as such we're often left with having to look things up on the interweb to double check things in order to know which port a device actually has and so forth. It has certainly been like this for me.
This evening I wanted to test something with an external drive I have, and I realised I didn't know for sure exactly which versions of USB ports my motherboard has. I then spent a good few hours working out what those specs are as Gigabyte has not accurately labelled the USB ports anywhere in their documentation (at least that I could find). It appears as a small mislabelling, but it's exactly the kind of mislabelling that makes it impossible to understand which USB version each port has, except the USB 2.0 ports. I came across a review which had described each ports specs (thanks to kitguru.net) and was then able to settle the issue. Also, what I don't understand is why Gigabyte don't write the ports' speeds anywhere, for example on their website, as marketing info. This would have solved the whole problem.
I have attached an image of my motherboard's back plate with the ports named the simple way and their speeds. I have also listed the ways USB ports are labelled, adapted from wikipedia and USB-IF. As you can see, leaving out the x 1 or x 2 part of the version name in columns 'Also named 1' & 'Also named 2 ' makes it impossible to know which USB version one actually has at hand. This is what Gigabyte do.
(Please correct me if I have made mistakes anywhere in this post, as it sure wouldn't be useful with even more confusion!)
Anyway, hope this helps someone at some point not having to spend several hours of their evening figuring out something that shouldn't take more than the time it takes looking up the product on the manufacturer's website. What an incredibly idiotic thing it is to not write at least the ports' speed numbers. One should think that marketing mumbojumbo theoretical speed numbers sells more products than naming conventions nobody understands without digging into wiki pages, and then on top of that using them wrong. It's just makes no sense whatsoever.
USB versions, their speeds, and their different naming conventions:
Easy USB version/name | Consumer/marketing name | Speed (theoretical) | Also named 1 | Also named 2 | Note |
USB 2.0 | High Speed | 0.48 Gbit/s (480 Mbit/s) | |||
USB 3.0 | SuperSpeed USB | 5.0 Gbit/s | USB 3.1 Gen 1 | USB 3.2 Gen 1 × 1 | |
USB 3.1 | SuperSpeed+ USB | 10.0 Gbit/s | USB 3.1 Gen 2 | USB 3.2 Gen 2 × 1 | Last version to support Type A |
USB 3.2 | SuperSpeed+ USB dual-lane | 20.0 Gbit/s | USB 3.2 Gen 1 × 2 | USB 3.2 Gen 2 × 2 multi-link modes | Requires type C connector |
USB4 20Gbps | USB4 20Gbps | 20.0 Gbit/s | |||
USB4 40Gbps | USB4 40Gbps | 40.0 Gbit/s |
My motherboard's backplate, the correct USB versions and Gigabyte's labelling underneath: