X

Inateck 2 Port PCIe USB 3.0 Card with Internal USB 3.0 20-Pin Connector - Expand Another Two USB 3.0 Ports, Compatible Mac Pro, No Additional Power Connection Needed

Product ID : 5448608


Galleon Product ID 5448608
Model
Manufacturer
Shipping Dimension Unknown Dimensions
I think this is wrong?
-
1,608

*Price and Stocks may change without prior notice
*Packaging of actual item may differ from photo shown

Pay with

About Inateck 2 Port PCIe USB 3.0 Card With Internal USB

Due to frequently updated drivers, please download the latest version on our Inateck official website to enhance your using experience. Attention- internal USB3. 0 20pin connector need work with USB3. 0 20pin adapter to achieve 2x USB3. 0 hosts - USB3. 0 20pin adapter is not included in package- This USB 3. 0 Express card is not meant to serve as a stand-alone charger. Features- no additional power supply for normal recognition and operation needed anymore, optimized board Plane architecture, Fast and easy installation, keeps your PC case tidy- extend with 2 USB 3. 0 downstream ports and 1 USB3. 0 20-pin connector (can expand another two USB 3. 0 ports) for standard desktop PC- support UASP: 70% faster than traditional USB 3. 0, With Rasp transfer protocol; the UASP transfer protocol only can accelerate read and write speed of SSD hard disk operating systems- Windows XP, Vista, windows 7, window 8 and Windows 10 (32/64-bit)- the expansion card is applicable to the Mac Pro (2008 to 2012 Version)- Mac OS 10. 8. 2 or Mac OS 10. 9. 5 - this PCI-E Card is incompatible with Mac OS X 10. 10 Yosemite or above. Attention: If devices attached to the Express card aren't recognized after a Restart of the computer, It is advised to detach and Reattach the devices onto another USB port again, So a proper recognition is realized the card doesn't work properly from the start, you may try out the following step-by-step 1: de- and Reattach the devices to be recognized, so the system can try another recognition searchstep 2: augment with the optional power supply, so an automatic search can be retried 3: check the PCI-E socket on the main board for possible faultsstep 4: Try out another desktop PC, if available, to determine the card’s general functionality