- Enjoy Ultra HD 5K on a single screen or up to three 4K displays via USB-C
- Supports up to three 4K displays or a single 5K Display
- Four USB 3.0 Ports. One USB-C port. System Requirement (Recommended): PC’s equipped with USB3.0 or USB-C port,DisplayLink Driver installation
- Os required-Windows 7, 8, 8.1, 10 32/64bit or later. Charges up to 65W laptop via USB-C
- Troubleshoot-incompatible display driver this message will appear if the primary graphics card drivers installed are not wddm compatible. Windows 7 onwards is not designed to operate without wddm drivers. Download and install the latest graphics drivers for your primary graphics card.Third 4K display at 30 Hz
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Meli Tuiavi'i
The BEST docking station!
The BEST docking station! I have an HP Zbook 15 and I had tried several other docking stations from HP and was highly disappointed. So I decided to buy this one by Dell and WOW was I surprised how awesome it was, it just worked right out of the box. Plugged it all in did a Windows update, rebooted and both of my Dell Ultrabright 27in monitos just worked. Thank you Dell for making a great product, maybe HP should take a lesson from Dell and design a product that works.
Dawud Basharat Yaqoob
Fer replicatin' ports and what not.
Color me impressed. I originally bought this for my Dell tablet. I recently started a new job and they gave me a ThinkPad, had to work from home for half a day and plugged it into a USB port thinking it probably wouldn't work but it did. I thought it was universal but wasn't sure how universal. I'm happy with the purchase and if I needed another I would.
Con Ylarde Bote
Finally Got A Docking That Works
I have two laptops, personal Lenovo X1 Carbon 6th Gen (Thunderbolt 3) and from work Dell Latitude 3490 (USB-C 3) and I was looking for a dock that drives both laptops with 2x QHD displays (HP Ellitedisplay 240q). Before trying the Dell D6000, I tried CalDigit TS3+ and Cable Matters USB-C docks and non of them drove my dell, but worked with my Lenovo. And finally I got the dell D6000 that detected both laptops like a champ and drives my displays at their highest resolution. I mounted it on the back of my display so no cable is visible on my desk, just a USB-C cable that charges my laptop and provide connectivity to my mouse, keyboard, webcam and boss speakers. If I want to mention disadvantage of dell D6000 they would be lack of ports (comparing to the CalDigit): - Lack of fiber audio port for my Boss speaker, I should use USB connection instead (a little lower quality) - Lack of number of USB-A ports. D6000 offers only 4 USB-A ports which are already utilized. - Lack of SD Card slot - I have to purchase a separate USB-C to SD Card connector and attach it to D6000. However, as long as it worked for me and addressed almost my requirements (with some workarounds), I would be happy to give it a 5 star considering my bad experience with CalDigit and Cable Matters. I have not done speed test yet though that is my real concern anyway. So I give it a pass. NOTE: The CalGigit dock is a Thuderbolt 3 dock and it is not supposed to work my dell Latitude 3490 by design (my mistake to buy it in first place). So if you have laptops that support TB3, the CalDigit might be a better option considering its variety and number of ports. However it comes with a high price $304. NOTE: The Cable Connect dock, on the other hand was a USB-C dock that did not work with my dell latitude USB-C port which was disappointing. Thanks to Amazon Prime, I did not have to worry about return.
Beck Connor
Works great with a Dell XPS15 9570!
Just purchased for use with a Dell 9570 XPS 15. Downloaded the drives from the dell site, plugged in and worked without any issue first time through. At least for my model, the USB C is not powerful enough to power the laptop so I still ahve to use a charger. I'm sure there are some laptops that will charge over USBC, which would be a huge plus. Dell/Windows is at least nice enough to have prompted me onscreen that there wasn't enough power. I like the USBC cable comes in a USB3 adaptor thing. Not sure what that's for exactly, I suppose if you jsut wanted to use it as a hub instead of doing displays. Device does get warm, which is slightly annoying, but I don't have other docks to compare it to. It would also be nice if windows (and adobe) would autodetect the hub has been connected and automatically switch over the audio profiles to use the hub (or use the laptop when disconnected).
Tina Hutchins
Great product. Simple set-up and ease-of-use and good performance.
So far, so good. I'm using this to connect a Surface Pro 4 (Core m3) to two Dell 24" 1080p Display Port monitors, and it works just fine. There does seem to be a little lag at times -- such as when using the wired keyboard attached to the dock and when dragging windows across displays -- but it's minimal and the pros far outweigh the cons. I downloaded the standard DisplayLink drive for Windows 10 off the DisplayLink website, installed them, and connected the dock. It was as simple as that. It also works with my Dell Latitude laptop, so I'm happy to be able to use either my work-issued notebook when working from home and my personal computer. It also charges my Android phone pretty quickly, and I can also charge my vape pen. :) The design is also appealing: a very simple, small black box with a subtle power/status LED. All-in-all, I'm very satisfied with this product. While a little pricey, it has the 2x DisplayPort outputs that really cleaned things up -- no need for weird cables or adapters, etc.
Beth Davis
Awesome product! Light, small, compact, and well built!
Absolutely awesome. Light, small, and compact. Easier to install on Mac devices. HP took a bit of issues, but were overcome as long as you upgrade the Intel USB Hub Controller 3.0 drivers. Took me a while, but since handled, easy peasy. The down side is there isn't clear instructions, very vague and missing. They point to 2 sites: Dell and DisplayLink. Need to go to DisplayLink for the download. Do not plug in the dock until DisplayLink drivers are installed, follow the prompts, and plug in when notified (goes a lot better, trust me). After figuring out the driver installs and updates it is great to use and has become very handy. I have tucked mine on a bracket on the back of the desk given the minimal design and allows for that clean desk look.
Fiona Mullins
I replaced my company docks
I can't vouch for other non-Dell Thunderbolt docks, but if you're sticking with Dell this is the one to get. I've tried the TB15/16 and they are absolute nightmares (constantly crashing, a cable that's only a few inches long, weird power failures.) I've tried the D3100 and it was... I mean it was fine but who wants to plug in two asymmetrical cables when Thunderbolt exists? This one works a treat. PD if your laptop isn't a power hog. Plenty of bandwidth for my 4K monitor and 4K webcam. Small, no weird power or heat issues and ample cable room to stash it away somewhere.
Susan Jordan
Does what it claims!
Finally, a Dell or USB-C Dock that works. In the past, I've used the TB15 (a Thunderbolt dock that was a poor design, rarely worked, and was quickly replaced by the TB16), the TB16 (a bit better than the TB15, but only a little), the WD15 (a non-Thunderbolt USB-C dock that also had RF issues and was quirky in general). I tried them all and sent them all back. This is basically a WD15 (USB-C, plus video over Alt-mod), with a 6000-series Displaylink hung off the USB hub, driving two display outputs. It all just works. I'm using two 4k monitors. Before buying, do understand the limitations of Displaylink: It's great for general usage, but not usable for performance intensive games. The Displaylink video goes over USB, so it competes with ethernet and everything else except for the alt-mode video. Alt mode on HDMI drives my 4k monitor at 30Hz, which is fine for my general office usage. It claims to be able to do 60Hz, but honestly, I've not tried and I'm using a crappy HDMI cable, so it might be possible. Also, the Power Delivery output itsn't enough to power some power-hungry laptops. Know your specs before you order.
Ella Belle
Univeral Dock actually does seem to be universal
This dock really does seem to be universal. So far, I've connected a Galaxy Book 12, a Dell XPS 13 9370, an Intel NUC6CAYH, and a Galaxy S9. All worked out of the box without needing drivers. (I did later download the drivers, 'cause I'm obsessive like that... and also, why wouldn't you?). Currently connected to a Dell U2414H via DisplayPort, and a 28" Dell via HDMI. There's a free DisplayPort connection that I'm not even using. I'm not busy or important enough for three monitors, I guess. I have a wireless keyboard and mouse connected via one of the USBP type A ports, and those work with no issues. I didn't bother with the ethernet connection, as the wireless adapters on the devices above are all hella fast. If I had a complaint, it's that the USB 3.0/USB-c wire that connects to your PC, laptop, whatever, is not replaceable (at least, you can't unplug it from the dock itself). If that wire goes, you're hosed unless you are very handy with wiring. The end of the power cord that plugs into the dock lights up bright blue when the device has power. I'm not sure that's necessary or helpful.
Edelwina Cereza
Totally worth the cost. I'm running two 1440p displays off of the dual displayport at native resolution.
This thing is amazing. I work at home from time to time, and I managed to get a branded doc for my laptop. My mother in law visits frequent from cross country and she just got a new laptop to travel with her so she can work remotely. Rather than work off the laptop I figured I'd try a universal doc. It has two Display ports and one HDMI and can drive all three monitors over usb-3 or usb-C. The monitors I'm running on it now are a pair of Dell Ultrasharp U2715H monitors at 2560x1440. Not sure on the frequency. The spec says it can drive one more monitor over HDMI. It also has ethernet, audio, and usb ports to attach a handful of peripherals. I'm using this for what I would deem casual web browsing on the personal side, and office productivity on the work side, no gaming or heavy video for me. I bought two other brands of universal docs, and they couldn't match the display resolution this one does. I't is very small and unassuming. The attachment to your laptop has a native usb-c connector, and attached to it is a USB-3, no hunting around for the right cable to connect it up. If you want to drive 2 high resolution office productivity monitors from one usbc/usb3 connection this is the way to go, just make sure to get quality video cables for it to work optimally. Cheap cables can flak out on you causing more trouble than it's worth (I speak from experience).