GRAUGEAR 40Gbps Enclosure Docking Station Review
Discover the GRAUGEAR 40Gbps Enclosure Docking Station—your ticket to high-speed data bliss. Easy, efficient, and refreshingly cool. Dive into digital delight!
The GRAUGEAR 40Gbps NVMe SSD Docking Station lets you drop in a bare M.2 NVMe SSD, connect a single USB-C cable to your laptop, and transfer files at up to 40 Gbps. No screwdriver. No driver installation. No enclosure screws. You slide the SSD into the dock, close it, and plug in. A 50mm cooling fan and aluminum heatsink keep the SSD running cool during sustained transfers, reducing heat by 60% compared to an unventilated enclosure. If you move large files regularly, back up drives frequently, or swap SSDs between machines for work, this dock turns that process from a multi-step operation into a one-motion task.
The ASM2464PD USB 4.0 chipset provides the 40 Gbps speed. Compatible with Thunderbolt 4, Thunderbolt 3, and backward compatible with USB 3.2, 3.1, 3.0, and 2.0 at their respective speed limits. To reach 40 Gbps, you need a USB 4.0 or Thunderbolt 4 port on your laptop and updated OS and NVM firmware. Manufactured by CHAB GmbH. 12-month warranty. Plug & Play with no drivers needed.
Key Specifications
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Chipset | ASM2464PD (USB 4.0) |
| Maximum Speed | 40 Gbps (PCIe 4.0 x4) |
| Interface | USB-C (USB Type-C) |
| SSD Type | M.2 NVMe |
| Cooling | 50mm fan (with low-noise adapter) + aluminum heatsink |
| Heat Reduction | 60% compared to unventilated |
| Installation | Tool-free (no screwdriver needed) |
| Driver | Not needed (Plug & Play) |
| UASP/TRIM | Supported |
| Protection | Short-circuit, over-current, multi-protection |
| Compatible With | Thunderbolt 4/3, USB 4.0/3.2/3.1/3.0/2.0 |
| Compatible Devices | Desktop, Laptop, PS5, iPad, iPhone |
| Weight | 0.24 kg / 0.53 lbs |
| Manufacturer | CHAB GmbH (Germany) |
| Warranty | 12 months |
What 40 Gbps Means for Your Workflow
At 40 Gbps, a 100 GB video project transfers in approximately 20 seconds. At USB 3.0 speeds (5 Gbps), the same file takes nearly 3 minutes. If you are a video editor moving project files between a desktop and a laptop, a photographer backing up a day’s shoot to a fast SSD, or an IT professional cloning drives between machines, the speed difference is not a spec number. It is the difference between waiting and not waiting.
The 40 Gbps speed requires a USB 4.0 or Thunderbolt 4 port on your computer. If your laptop has Thunderbolt 3 (20 Gbps max for storage), the dock works but tops out at the lower speed. If your laptop has USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10 Gbps), the dock works at that speed. The dock is backward compatible, but backward compatibility means backward speed. Check your laptop’s port standard before expecting 40 Gbps transfers.
Tool-Free SSD Swapping
Most NVMe enclosures require you to open a case, insert the SSD, secure it with a tiny screw that you will inevitably drop under the desk, close the case, and tighten more screws. The GRAUGEAR uses a tool-free mechanism. Open, insert the M.2 SSD, close. No screwdriver. No screws to lose. No fumbling.
This matters most when you swap SSDs frequently. If you keep different projects on different drives, or if you move data between machines by physically carrying SSDs, the tool-free design turns a two-minute operation into a five-second one. Pop the old drive out, pop the new one in, connect the cable, and you are working. For users who use one SSD permanently, the tool-free design is a convenience. For users who swap drives daily, it is the reason to choose this dock over screw-based enclosures.
Active Cooling That Protects Your SSD and Your Speed
NVMe SSDs generate heat during sustained transfers. When an SSD overheats, it throttles its speed to protect itself. A 40 Gbps-capable drive that throttles to 10 Gbps because of heat defeats the purpose of a 40 Gbps dock. The GRAUGEAR addresses this with two cooling methods working simultaneously.
The 50mm fan with a low-noise adapter provides active cooling. Air moves across the SSD continuously during operation. The aluminum heatsink provides passive cooling by absorbing and radiating heat away from the SSD. Together, they reduce SSD temperature by 60%. The practical result is that the SSD maintains its rated speed during long transfers rather than slowing down after the first few gigabytes. The low-noise adapter keeps fan sound minimal. If you work in a quiet environment, the fan is present but not distracting.
UASP and TRIM Support
UASP (USB Attached SCSI Protocol) allows the SSD to communicate with your computer more efficiently than the standard BOT (Bulk-Only Transport) protocol. The result is faster real-world transfer speeds and lower CPU usage during transfers. TRIM support tells the SSD which data blocks are no longer in use, allowing the drive’s controller to optimize performance and extend the SSD’s lifespan. Both features are supported out of the box with no configuration needed.
Protection Features
The ASM2464PD controller includes short-circuit protection, over-current protection, and multi-protection systems. If a power surge or connection fault occurs, the controller shuts down before damage reaches the SSD or your data. For a device that holds bare drives containing potentially irreplaceable work, these protections provide confidence that the dock will not be the cause of data loss. For how USB-C connections handle power and data, see our USB-C portable monitor guide.
What’s in the Box
| Item | Included |
|---|---|
| GRAUGEAR USB4 M.2 SSD Docking Station | 1 |
| USB-C to USB-C Cable | 1 |
| Aluminum Heatsink | 1 |
| Thermal Pads | Included |
| Rubber Rim | 1 |
| Warranty Card + Manual | 1 |
No SSD included. You supply the M.2 NVMe drive. The thermal pads go between the SSD and the heatsink for optimal heat transfer. The rubber rim provides grip and vibration dampening on the desk surface.
Drawbacks
| Consideration | Detail |
|---|---|
| 40 Gbps Requires USB 4.0 or Thunderbolt 4 | Backward compatible but at reduced speeds. Most laptops do not have USB 4.0. |
| Firmware Must Be Updated | OS build and NVM firmware must be current for 40 Gbps recognition. |
| Device May Not Be Recognized | Bullets warn that backward compatibility may result in the device not being recognized on some systems. |
| No SSD Included | You supply the M.2 NVMe drive. |
| 12-Month Warranty | Standard. Some competitors offer 2 years. |
| Not a Display Dock | This is a storage enclosure. No video output. No monitor connections. |
Who This Dock Is For
Video editors, photographers, IT professionals, and anyone who transfers large files between machines or swaps SSDs frequently: The 40 Gbps speed turns multi-minute transfers into seconds. The tool-free design turns SSD swapping into a five-second operation. The active cooling keeps the SSD at full speed during sustained transfers instead of throttling. The ASM2464PD protections keep your data safe. At 0.24 kg it travels anywhere. If large file transfers are part of your daily workflow, this dock removes the waiting from that process. For docking stations with display output, see our docking stations hub page.
Users who need monitor connections or display expansion: This is a storage dock, not a display dock. It has no HDMI, DisplayPort, or video output of any kind. For screen extension and monitor connectivity, see our laptop screen extenders hub page.
Final Verdict
The GRAUGEAR 40Gbps NVMe SSD Docking Station does one thing and does it exceptionally well: it moves data between an M.2 NVMe SSD and your computer at the fastest speed the USB standard allows. The tool-free design makes SSD swapping effortless. The 50mm fan and aluminum heatsink prevent thermal throttling during long transfers. The ASM2464PD controller protects your data. UASP and TRIM support optimize performance and SSD lifespan. At 0.24 kg with Plug & Play operation, it fits into any workflow that involves moving large amounts of data quickly.
The 40 Gbps speed is real but conditional: you need USB 4.0 or Thunderbolt 4 on your computer, and your firmware must be current. On older USB standards, the dock works at reduced speeds. The 12-month warranty is standard. No SSD is included. For professionals whose work involves large files and fast turnaround, the GRAUGEAR eliminates the transfer bottleneck that cheaper enclosures create. Your data moves as fast as the SSD can write it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will I actually get 40 Gbps transfer speeds?
Only if your laptop has a USB 4.0 or Thunderbolt 4 port and your OS and NVM firmware are up to date. On Thunderbolt 3, you top out at 20 Gbps for storage. On USB 3.2 Gen 2, you top out at 10 Gbps. The dock is backward compatible but the speed matches your laptop’s port standard, not the dock’s maximum.
Do I need tools to install the SSD?
No. The dock uses a tool-free mechanism. Open, insert the M.2 NVMe SSD, apply the thermal pad and heatsink, close. No screwdriver. No screws.
Is the fan loud?
The 50mm fan includes a low-noise adapter designed for quiet operation. In a normal office or home environment, the fan noise is minimal. In a completely silent room, you may hear a faint hum.
Can I connect this to my PS5?
The compatible devices list includes PS5. However, PS5 USB ports operate at USB 3.2 speeds (10 Gbps max), not 40 Gbps. The dock functions but at the PS5’s port speed, not the dock’s maximum.
Does this connect to monitors?
No. This is a storage enclosure for M.2 NVMe SSDs. It has no video output. For monitor connections and screen extension, see the docking stations and portable monitors elsewhere on this site.
Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Docking Station Intelligence
The standards are confusing by design. These three panels decode what manufacturers won’t explain clearly. Applicable to every docking station.
The USB-C Confusion Matrix
The USB-C connector is the single greatest source of buyer confusion in docking stations. The physical plug looks identical whether it carries USB 2.0 at 480 Mbps or Thunderbolt 5 at 120 Gbps — a 250x difference in capability hidden behind the same shape. Manufacturers exploit this by labeling everything "USB-C compatible" without specifying which protocol runs through it. Two docks can look identical on the outside and behave completely differently once you plug them in.
The hierarchy matters because it determines everything: how many monitors your dock can drive, how fast files transfer, whether your laptop charges while docked, and whether you need third-party drivers. Here is the real capability ladder, from slowest to fastest:
The practical takeaway: if your laptop has Thunderbolt 4, buy a Thunderbolt dock. If it only has generic USB-C, verify whether it supports DisplayPort Alt Mode before buying anything with multi-monitor claims. Our buying guide walks through verification steps for every major laptop brand.
Power Delivery: What the Watts Mean
Power Delivery (PD) determines whether your docking station can charge your laptop while you work, or whether you need a separate charger cluttering your desk. The math is simple but rarely explained: your laptop draws a specific wattage under load, and the dock must match or exceed it. If the dock delivers less than your laptop needs, the battery slowly drains even while plugged in — defeating the purpose of a docking station entirely.
Most ultrabooks need 45–65W. Standard business laptops need 65–100W. Gaming and workstation laptops can demand 100–140W or more. The dock’s advertised PD wattage is the maximum it can deliver to your laptop — but this drops if you charge other devices (phones, tablets) through the dock simultaneously. Always leave a 15–20W margin above your laptop’s requirement.
Check your laptop’s original charger wattage — that’s your baseline. Our FAQ covers how to find this for every major brand.
Native Display vs DisplayLink: The Hidden Factor
This is the decision most buyers don’t know they’re making. When a docking station outputs video to your monitors, it uses one of two fundamentally different methods: native (the dock passes your laptop’s GPU signal directly to the monitor) or DisplayLink (the dock compresses video over USB and a software driver renders it). The difference is invisible in marketing materials but profoundly affects your daily experience.
Native output through DisplayPort Alt Mode or Thunderbolt uses your laptop’s actual graphics hardware. There is zero added latency, full DRM support for streaming services, no CPU overhead, and no driver to install. DisplayLink, by contrast, adds 5–15ms of latency (noticeable in video calls and cursor movement), blocks DRM content on connected monitors (Netflix, Disney+ show black screens), consumes 3–8% of your CPU constantly, and requires a driver that Apple’s macOS security updates occasionally break.
DisplayLink exists for one reason: Apple Silicon base chips (M1, M2, M3) can only drive one external display natively. If you need two or more monitors on a base MacBook Air or 13” MacBook Pro, DisplayLink is your only option. For everyone else — Windows users, Mac Pro/Max chip users, Intel/AMD laptops — native is always the better choice.
Native (Alt Mode / Thunderbolt)
DisplayLink (USB compression)
The bottom line: if your laptop supports native multi-display output, always choose a native dock. DisplayLink is a workaround, not an upgrade. See our glossary for detailed definitions.
COMMAND CENTERCOMMAND CENTER
Six tools that decode the confusion manufacturers create. Port protocols, power budgets, display configurations, compatibility, desk planning, and future-proofing. Full buying guide →
Port Protocol DecoderWhat does your connection type actually support? Glossary
Power Delivery CalculatorCan this dock keep your laptop charged?
Display Configuration PlannerCan your dock push enough pixels?
Laptop-to-Dock CompatibilityWill this dock work with YOUR laptop?
Desk Setup ArchitectWhat ports do you actually need?
Select everything you need to connect:
