USB C Dock or monitor with built in hub?
USB C Dock or monitor with built in hub?
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Discussion

Phunk

Original Poster:

2,070 posts

190 months

Sunday 27th July
quotequote all
Setting up a small home office for the wife, looking to add a second screen to her laptop, only other peripherals are a USB mouse and keyboard.

She has two laptops, one M1 MacBook Air and a HP laptop. Would we be better going for a monitor with built in hub, or a separate hub? Looking to keep the cost down as much as possible.

Many thanks!

flight147z

1,290 posts

148 months

Sunday 27th July
quotequote all
I've got a monitor that's connected to all peripherals (speakers, mouse, keyboard). Single cable (USB C) plugs into laptop and everything works including charging. Perfect for me

Harpoon

2,307 posts

233 months

Sunday 27th July
quotequote all
Cheapest option would be a monitor (24") with a USB-C hub - easily done for sub £100. Monitors are £58 upwards and an Anker USB-C hub with PD and HDMI is £12. A quick Google suggests the cheapest monitor with USB-C hub starts at £150.

danb79

12,382 posts

91 months

Sunday 27th July
quotequote all
Personally I'd have a monitor and a separate USB hub - that's the set up I have for my M4 Macbook Air and M4 Mac Mini

Both into my Dell 4k monitor with their own UGREEN USB C hubs etc

Zero issues and all works as it should

psi310398

10,422 posts

222 months

Sunday 27th July
quotequote all
^This.

bobthemonkey

4,134 posts

235 months

Sunday 27th July
quotequote all
Just check the power output of the USB-C PD connection on the monitor. Quite often a stand alone dock will have a higher max wattage than an in-built monitor.

If looking for a all in one solution however, I’ve found Dell to be pretty decent (as are their higher end TB19 docks)