On 1/17/23 09:43, Rich Shepard wrote:
On Tue, 17 Jan 2023, Galen Seitz wrote:

Sorry, I haven't been following this thread too closely, but if this is a
device you already own, you can look this up yourself. First use lsusb to
find the vendor and product ID values for the USB device of interest. Then
use lsusb again to get more information about the device.

Galen,

What a valuable lesson!

# lsusb -v -d 1235:8211 | egrep 'iProduct|MaxPower'
   iProduct                3 Scarlett Solo USB
     MaxPower              500mA

This suggests to me that a less expensive hub with fewer ports that has at
least 50W published power would work with all three devices.

FYI, the typical 4 port powered USB 2.0 hub is supplied with a 5V adapter that is capable of ~2A, or about 500 mA per port. With a USB 3.0 hub where the per port current limit is 900 mA, the max adapter current should be higher, but it's unlikely the adapter would be sized to allow the max current on every port.

Hubs that have high (>15W) wattage are likely intended to support some sort of charging of phones/tablets/etc where communication regarding the larger current capability is communicated through a different mechanism.

Once again, the above does not directly apply to USB C hubs that support power delivery.

Rich, if you have three devices that draw 500 mA, a hub with a 2A adapter should be sufficient. Look for a hub with a 2.5A or 3A adapter if one or two of your devices draw 900 mA.

BTW, I can guarantee you that virtually all of the crazy USB-powered things you can buy do *not* have USB descriptors. Your Ronco USB fan, light, and turnip twaddler connect to VUSB (5V) and immediately attempt to draw whatever they need, regardless of any intended USB constraints. Buyer beware.


galen
--
Galen Seitz
[email protected]

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