
The Belkin Thunderbolt Express dock maximizes Thunderbolt technology, providing 8 ports to leverage the capable speeds of USB 3.0, FireWire and other transfer protocols including:
- 1 Thunderbolt port
- 1 FireWire 800 port
- 1 Gigabit Ethernet port
- 3 USB 3.0 ports (max 2.5Gbps transfer rate)
- 1 3.5mm-out port
- 1 3.5mm-in port
All connect to 1 Thunderbolt port.


ELEGANT DESIGN
A technology as brilliant and beautiful as Thunderbolt deserves a dock that not only performs at the highest level, but looks the part as well. So the Thunderbolt Express Dock was designed with an elegant, low profile. Simple is beautiful, and Thunderbolt Express Dock is a shining example.
At A Glance:
- 20 times faster than USB 2.0
- 12 times faster than FireWire 800
- Transfer an entire HD movie in 30 seconds
- Sync a year’s worth of continuous music in 10 minutes
- Daisy chain up to 5 Thunderbolt-enabled devices
Tech Specs
Wi-Fi Speed | 10GbS |
Number of Firewire Ports | 1 |
Number of USB Ports | 3 |
Camera Interface | 3 x SuperSpeed USB 3.0 - 9 pin USB Type A, 1 x network - Ethernet 10Base-T/100Base-TX/1000Base-TX - RJ-45, 1 x IEEE 1394b (FireWire 800) - 9 pin FireWire 800, 1 x audio - line-out - mini-phone stereo 3.5 mm , 1 x microphone - input - mini-phone 3.5 mm, 2 x Thunderbolt - Apple mini-DisplayPort |
Interface Type | Network adapter |
Power | Power adapter - external |
Data Link Protocol(s) | Gigabit Ethernet |
Operating Humidity | 5%-95%R.H |
Operating Temperature | -10℃-+40℃ |
Input Current | 1500mA(max)@100VAC/60Hz |
Output Current | 0.5W@240VAC/50Hz |
Output Voltage | 12V |
Compatibility
- MacBook Pro 17”
- MacBook Pro 15”
- MacBook Pro 13”
- MacBook Pro (2014)
- MacBook Air 13”
- MacBook Air
- MacBook Air 11”
Support
Press
Thunderbolt wins Macworld Editor's Choice Award
ThundeNeat and versatile docking solution for Mac users Read More
—Thu, 08 Aug 2013
TECHCRUNCH
“If you ever feel like your Mac doesn’t have enough hardware input/output options, then the Belkin Thunderbolt Express Dock is for you… For my money, the Belkin is the way to go, especially if you use your Mac as your main workstation.“ Read More
—May 03, 2013