

This doesn't help you but one thing I've done is look for "two port" devices like the OWC Express 4M2 which can be daisy chained, but anything with two ports seems to be quite a bit more costly. unless those USB-C devices have two ports. Ironically, it makes it easier to hook up legacy USB devices then modern USB-C devices. Surely there's a market for what you seek. I think there are engineering reasons for this but I'm not sure what they are. I was looking recently as well and I couldn't find any Thunderbolt docks with more than two ports (max seems to be one for input from a macbook, and one output). Any thoughts? Ideas? Any reason why hubs/docks are so limited in USB-C support in 2019? I understood in 2016, but not now. I can't seem to find anything like that, which would daisy chain them OR just be a hub so I can connect 3-4 more USB-C drives into a single port. I remember I had a USB 3.0 hub that could connect 6-7 old USB drives at once. Then I have to still dangle all of my drives off of the Mac.argh.
#Mac usb hub for external drives mac
The one I have (which I need to replace as it doesn't do power delivery for my 15", it was great for 13"), is a TB3 and goes to the Mac from one port and has another USB-C input for the monitor.

I have a several USB-C SSD external drives and am looking for a way to connect them via a hub.Īlmost every hub I come across is severely lacking USB-C connections. The issue, and what I am looking for, is this. that I leave my 4k USB-C 4k monitor connected to it. I do have a dock that connects my old USB 3.1 drives, ethernet, etc.

I have been running on USB-C MacBook Pro's since 2016 (currently a 2018 15").
