Gadget Review: Mokin USB-C Docking Station (+ Linux information)


I've been looking for this rare beast for ages - a hub which has multiple USB-C outputs!

You see it is a truth, universally acknowledged, that computers don't have enough ports on them. And laptops? Pah! A couple of USB-C if you're lucky, and one of them has to be used for power. What a world!

This is the MOKiN USB-C Triple-Display Docking Station - MODK1402. It's a bit over £100 depending on the deal you get.

Small black box in a cardboard box.

Shiny! This turns one USB port on your laptop to fourteen extra ports.

So, what's it packing?

On the back is:

Back of the hub with many ports.

  • Ethernet.
  • USB 2.0 - for your slow gadgets.
  • HDMI.
  • 2x DisplayPort.
  • USB-C host. Take the included 1 metre long C-to-C cable and connect your laptop to the hub.
  • USB-C power input. Shove a 100W adapter in there and it will power your laptop, gadgets, and toaster.
  • There's also a Kensington Lock port on the side if you're worried about theft.

On the front is:

Front of  the hub with multiple ports and a power button.

  • 2x USB-C. Yes! This is what I'm here for! They won't do PD levels of charging, but you can happily plug in your phones to charge, transfer data, or anything else.
  • USB 3.1. The highest speed USB-A port. Plug in a drive and watch the bits fly
  • 3.5mm TRRS port. Stereo audio out, mono mic in.
  • Bright white LED. Stick some tape on it and never have it bother you again.
  • SD & MicroSD slots. A bit weird, but I guess useful to some.
  • 2x USB 3. Another couple of USB slots.
  • Power button. Hold to toggle.

Testing

On both Windows 11 and Linux, everything worked just fine. Sorry there isn't anything more interesting to report there! No drivers to install. No weird command-line incantations. The promise of Plug-And-Play is met.

Well... Mostly. See the niggles section.

I tried using a single 1080p external monitor over HDMI and that was picked up. I don't have any screens with DisplayPort, so I can't test them. I also don't have a Mac to test with, but it all should work1.

The Ethernet maxed out my 500Mbps Internet connection. I was able to quickly transfer files from between the SD card and the drives. All the USB gadgets I plugged in worked. Again, super boring - which is just what I wanted.

The volume from the audio output was loud and stereo separated.

I had a dozen things plugged in and it kept on chugging.

USB Hub with a bright LED on the front.

There's no fan, so there's no noise from it. Basically, it is a small and boring box which does its job extremely well.

Now, a quick disclaimer. I am not a particularly demanding user. I don't have 3x 4K displays which are streaming live video from a USB stick while I download all of Wikipedia via Ethernet onto an SD card at the same time as blasting 5.1 audio and charging a dozen laptops. There's always going to be a limit to how much data and power you can squeeze through a single cable.

Niggles

I found that after my laptop went to sleep it sometimes didn't detect the HDMI output. I pressed the power button on the hub to turn in off. Then - and this will shock you - turned it back on again. HDMI sprang to life without a complaint. Perhaps it's my laptop, or my monitor, or the HDMI? Either way, not a show stopper.

Windows complained that the cable wasn't providing enough power and I should use the original Dell®™ charger. But it charged up quickly. I don't have a PD cable tester to see how many Watts it is actually delivering.

It did get a little warm after a few hours use. Nothing to be concerned about, but don't cover it with a cloth.

The audio out is louder than I was getting via HDMI and there is a bit of cross-chatter. If your speakers' volume is up high, you'll hear a bit of an electronic squeal / hum when no sound is playing.

The white LED is - like all modern electronics - bright. I'd have preferred something a bit more subtle.

Personally, I'd rather have extra HDMI than DisplayPorts. But I get that it is more efficient and better future-proofed.

It takes up a small amount of desk-space. A tower-design might have been nice. But I suspect the heat dissipation might have been an issue.

These are weak complaints. In terms of price:port ratio, it is excellent.

Linux Info

For nerds like me, this is what lsusb spits out:

Bus 004 Device 014: ID 0b95:1790 ASIX Electronics Corp. AX88179 Gigabit Ethernet
Bus 004 Device 013: ID 0bda:0326 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. Card reader
Bus 004 Device 012: ID 0bda:0411 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. Hub
Bus 004 Device 011: ID 0bda:0420 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. 4-Port USB 3.0 Hub
Bus 001 Device 042: ID 0bda:1100 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. HID Device
Bus 001 Device 041: ID 0d8c:0134 C-Media Electronics, Inc. USB PnP Audio Device
Bus 001 Device 039: ID 0bda:5411 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. RTS5411 Hub
Bus 001 Device 037: ID 1b3f:2008 Generalplus Technology Inc. USB Audio Device
Bus 001 Device 035: ID 1a40:0101 Terminus Technology Inc. Hub
Bus 001 Device 034: ID 0bda:5420 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. 4-Port USB 2.0 Hub

Lots of hubs just smushed together! I didn't bother cracking the case open. If you do, please leave a picture in the comments.

Triple monitors?

The MODK1402 can drive 3 external monitors. But, again, there's a limit to how much you can squirt down a single USB-C cable. They aren't magic!

Here are the configs that it lists. I don't have an 8K monitor to test(!) so please report back if you do have a suitable set of monitors.

In DP1.4

HDMIDP 1DP 2

Single display

8k@30Hz
4K@120Hz

  
 

8k@30Hz
4K@120Hz

 
  

8k@30Hz
4K@120Hz

Dual display

4K@60Hz

4K@60Hz 
 4K@60Hz

4K@60Hz

4K@60Hz

 

4K@60Hz

Triple display

4K@60Hz4K@30Hz

4K@30Hz

In DP1.2

HDMIDP 1DP 2

Single display

4K@30Hz  
  

4K@30Hz

 
   

4K@30Hz

Dual display

2K@60Hz1080P@60Hz 
  2K@60Hz

1080P@60Hz

 

1080P@60Hz

 

2K@60Hz

Triple display

Only can light up two displays

Verdict

If you need multiple USB-C ports out from your hub, this is one of the few devices which is capable of doing so. Having 4 extra USB-A ports is excellent. Three monitors is overkill for me - but it is good to be future-proof. The long cable makes it easy to swap between laptops which have their ports on different sides.

At the end of the day, one cable turns into 14 working ports. All for a bit over a hundred quid. Nice!


  1. Although MacOS is prevented from using more than one external monitor, as decreed by The Word of St Jobs. Anyone wanting to use more without buying an Apple-blessed device is a heretic and must be shunned. 
Verdict

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13 thoughts on “Gadget Review: Mokin USB-C Docking Station (+ Linux information)”

  1. Ben says:

    Although MacOS is prevented from using more than one external monitor

    I could be wrong but I think this is simply that the graphics card in low-end Apple Silicon can't handle more than two monitors: so either a builtin and one external (in a laptop), or two externals (on a Mac mini).

    Whether that's a good enough reason or not is another matter, of course.

    Reply
  2. said on burningnebula.net:

    @Edent You can do >1 external monitor on generic widgets plugged into MacOS tin and indeed default tin without widgets; typing this on a four-monitor M1 Pro Macbook setup. Internal GPU can only drive 2 displays at a time (more on M1/M2 Max), but with the lid shut, can get HDMI + USB-C to DisplayPort out, and then you can use DisplayLink with compatible docks to get another couple of displays if you want (though of course, DisplayLink adds quite a bit of overhead). That widget should do two outs!

    Reply | Reply to original comment on burningnebula.net
  3. says:

    Dual and triple display output‽ Without that horrible buggy slow software-based DisplayLink thing‽ I didn't know these kind of docks existed for affordable prices. If that's the case, I'm very impressed.

    Can you please double-check if it uses DisplayLink?
    (One way to check is to plug multiple monitors on it on a Linux machine. If they work out-of-the-box, it's certainly not using DisplayLink. Additionally, DisplayLink displays use an absurd amount of CPU and have a noticeable lag in their image.)

    Reply
    1. @edent says:

      I only have screens with HDMI in - I don't own anything with DisplayPort, so I can't easily test that.

      Reply
  4. says:

    It feels sketchy that their reviews on their Amazon page are actually for completely different products. One cannot trust those reviews.

    Reply
    1. @edent says:

      It is the same for everything on Amazon. Suppliers recycle old listings for the ratings bump.

      I purchased the unit myself. It wasn't sent to me in exchange for a review. So I hope you can trust me.

      Reply
      1. says:

        Definitely more trustworthy than random wrong reviews on a big tech website that cares more about big numbers than individuals.

        I have a Steam Deck Dock, which has an okay amount of ports (1x HDMI, 1x DisplayPort, 3x USB-A 3.1, Ethernet) for a reasonable price for a known good quality product (€99 including USB-PD power supply and free shipping). It's also quite compact. Meanwhile, the dock you got has way more I/O options. The same brand is also selling their own competitor to Steam Deck Dock for way cheaper.

        The trouble is to find good USB-C docks in the vast ocean of seemingly infinite rebranded chinese hardware of dubious or unknown quality. The trouble is finding the quality in the middle of the quantity. (And, to make it harder, find one that ships to whatever country you're living.)

        Reply
      2. Anthony Thomas says:

        Have you seen any issues with the Ethernet?
        I'm having problems with both windows and Ubuntu. Doesn't always seem to recognise a cable being connected.
        Wondering if it's a hardware issue or driver problem. It spews out quite a few errors to the log on Ubuntu

        Reply
        1. @edent says:

          I've found that Windows can take a few moments to find the network connection. But once it does, it is pretty stable.

          Linux finds it straight away, no obvious connection issues.

          I tend to power off the hub between switching laptops though.

          What errors are you seeing in Ubuntu?

          Reply

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