Anker launches new Thunderbolt 4 dock with 12 total ports
Anker has launched a new Thunderbolt 4 dock that's equipped with 12 total ports, including a 90-watt power pass-through slot and legacy options.

Credit: Anker
The Anker Apex Thunderbolt 4 dock sports the same general design as previous products in Anker's work-from-home lineup, but sports a broader selection of ports.
Those ports include a 90W Thunderbolt 4 port that can power any M1 MacBook model, though it isn't compatible with M1 desktops. There are also a pair of 4K HDMI ports, three USB-C ports, four USB-A ports, a Gigabit Ethernet port, a 3.5mm audio interface, and an SD card slot.
The Apex is compatible with a range of specifications, including USB4, DisplayPort, and PCI Express. The dock will be able to handle a single 8K display at 30Hz, a 4K display at 120Hz, or various other display combinations at 4K 60Hz. It can power up to three external monitors simultaneously, though only for Windows or Mac devices equipped with Intel chips.
Anker's Apex Thunderbolt 4 dock is available for $299.99 at Amazon. It's slated to start shipping on July 1.
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Credit: Anker
The Anker Apex Thunderbolt 4 dock sports the same general design as previous products in Anker's work-from-home lineup, but sports a broader selection of ports.
Those ports include a 90W Thunderbolt 4 port that can power any M1 MacBook model, though it isn't compatible with M1 desktops. There are also a pair of 4K HDMI ports, three USB-C ports, four USB-A ports, a Gigabit Ethernet port, a 3.5mm audio interface, and an SD card slot.
The Apex is compatible with a range of specifications, including USB4, DisplayPort, and PCI Express. The dock will be able to handle a single 8K display at 30Hz, a 4K display at 120Hz, or various other display combinations at 4K 60Hz. It can power up to three external monitors simultaneously, though only for Windows or Mac devices equipped with Intel chips.
Anker's Apex Thunderbolt 4 dock is available for $299.99 at Amazon. It's slated to start shipping on July 1.
Keep up with everything Apple in the weekly AppleInsider Podcast -- and get a fast news update from AppleInsider Daily. Just say, "Hey, Siri," to your HomePod mini and ask for these podcasts, and our latest HomeKit Insider episode too.If you want an ad-free main AppleInsider Podcast experience, you can support the AppleInsider podcast by subscribing for $5 per month through Apple's Podcasts app, or via Patreon if you prefer any other podcast player.
Comments
edit: on my own editorial note, I don't see much reason at all to use a Thunderbolt 4 dock if it doesn't work with M1 machines. Since all compatible Macs will be Thunderbolt 3 anyway? Unless you need a lot of monitors, for $300 I would go with the amazing CalDigit TS3+ dock: https://www.caldigit.com/ts3-plus/
Because of comments about the previous Anker, I just want to leave this: I have the previous generation Anker PowerExpand Elite 13-in-1 Thunderbolt dock. (They also make a non elite version which is not TB3 but USB-C only).
I needed something to drive an HDMI enabled 40" 4K TV as a monitor. I also wanted something with an output TB3 port and several 10gbs USB-C ports. It is hooked to a 2017 Intel powered iMac which also has an older Caldigit TB2 (using Apple TB2/TB3 adapter) dock and a Akitio Node Lite Thunderbolt PCIe expansion chassis. I had tried various ports (DP->HDMI etc) that I already had on the existing expansion docks/chassis to drive the 4K 40" over HDMI but nothing worked well (previously I WAS driving a 32" 4K monitor with a pure DP -- DP link) but the Anker has worked fine. I use a TB external storage and a USB-C external storage at the same time and also use the SD slot since the SD slot in the iMac has been flaky since forever. I've been using it since last October or so. I had another brand TB3 expansion dock that did not work well and was returned and the Anker took its place.
The Anker runs hot to the touch, which I guess is understandable with the small and dense size and the amount of stuff running off it. I am not using the charging 85W capacity as I have an iMac. I had been having intermittent troubles with the 40" 4K display not coming back after the display was blacked out by macOS (energy saving setting) and disappearing from the Mac (the monitors settings panel would not show it at all). Unplugging it and plugging it back in would sometimes work, but I often would have to turn the dock off for a while and then back on. It started happening more often recently and I contacted Anker. They had me make some tests (different HDMI cable, etc) and it still was a problem. So they forwarded me a replacement. However, on PRIME day I ordered a new HDMI cable as a backup since it was dirt cheap on lightning deal. When it came I swapped out the one I was using, and since then, I maybe had the problem once or twice, right after the swap (I may have not pushed the cable in all the way or something where the cable had an imperfect connection), and since then, about 1 week straight, it has been flawless. So I may be sending the replacement back to them untouched since my original once seemed to have a problem with the 2 cables I had tried and not the unit itself. I still have the replacement here while I continue the test. I may have bought the 2 "bad" cables at the same time and gotten subpar cables -- I've had them for a while and don't remember when I got them. But the Anker dock has actually been great since the new HDMI cable came. I have no complaints about the Anker TB3 dock of the previous generation and their support has been very responsive and accommodating.
It is interesting that they say this new Apex TB4 dock is not compatible with the M1 series. I wonder why they would make something that is not compatible. I don't know how well or how reliably this new one runs compared to the older model.
There has to be a TB device connected to the other port, connected to a display, or at least has a video out. Only then will the USB-C/TB3/TB4 storage device get full speed. It's not about TB4.
And it works beautifully with my (intel) Mac, my pc, and even a Samsung phone with Dex. Of course it only has one USB port, but you can add a usb 3.1 hub for additional ports if you need them.
How do I know? Because I had both a 2020 Intel and M1 13” MBP, along with TB3 and TB4 docks from OWC and CalDigit. I reported this issue to Apple and OWC months before they discovered the issue. In fact, OWC refused to acknowledge there was a problem at first.
Both the OWC and CalDigit TB4 docks I tested had their USB SSD write speed gimped at about 200Mb/s, compared to my lone TB3 dock which reached 600Mb/s. With the M1 Mac even the TB3 dock speed was slower than the M1 than the Intel Mac, which hit 700-900 Mb/s over the TB3 dock.
The issue is clearly the M1 Mac but it affects TB4 more than TB3. Either way, unless you have a TB3 monitor or TB3 Dock your willing to use with the drive, you won’t get the speed increase they mentioned.
What a mess. I sent all my TB4 docks back because of this flaw, since I don’t have a TB3 monitor.