![]() PowerColor maintains a list of supported graphics cards and host systems in the specifications section of its Gaming Station webpage. The newer box is rocking a 550 watt power supply, ethernet, and five USB 3.0 ports. PowerColor’s preferred enclosure is the simply named Gaming Station ( $300 on Newegg Remove non-product link). It’s still listed on PowerColor’s site, but it isn’t easy to find. PowerColor’s Thunderbolt 3-based Devil Box was a similarly fancy box that sold for $450 in the early days of external graphics docks. You’ll also need a relatively new notebook equipped with a Thunderbolt 3-compatible USB-C port. These days most Thunderbolt 3 laptops and graphics card enclosures play nicely together thanks to Intel’s Thunderbolt 3 external graphics compatibility technology, which PC makers must specifically enable. Enclosures are, for the most part, still a pricey proposition-much more so than the DIY method we’ll outline later. ![]() Thunderbolt 3 levels the playing field, and several companies now offer TB3-based graphics card docks, complete with dedicated power supplies, additional ports, and-of course-room to slot desktop graphics cards.Īll is not perfect in the world of Thunderbolt 3-powered graphics, however. For resource-intensive activities like gaming, a speedy connection between your laptop and an external graphics card provides a big boost for performance.Įarlier attempts at external graphics card docks existed, but they were usually overpriced and relied on proprietary connection technologies. ![]() Thunderbolt 3 (TB3) is Intel’s high-speed external input/output connection, capable of speeds up to a blistering 40 gigabytes per second (GBps) over a compatible USB-C port. Thunderbolt 3 graphics card docks Adam Patrick Murray/IDGĪ Razer Core connected to a Razer Blade Stealth laptop via Thunderbolt 3/USB-C. First, let’s tackle the modern approach of using a graphics card dock via Thunderbolt 3. ![]() We’ll walk you through the DIY process for configuring an external graphics card later in this article, along with the sudden rise of streaming PC games from the cloud.
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