If you buy USB4 40 Gbps certified cables, you'll solve your problem. That said, there shouldn't really be a difference between 10 and 20 Gbps cables, since you're using one or two pairs of the same wires, but apparently there still is. There are no 25 or 60 W cables, the next step down is 65 W and anything below that doesn't require an e-marker chip, so they're not "regulated" at all, since they fall outside of the standards that exists.Īs for data transfer, well, it has something to do with an ever evolving ecosystem, hence why you can buy different cables for different speeds. They also cost 2-3x as much as a USB 2.0 cable that can still deliver 100 W of power. There's a reason why so many cables are only USB 2.0 for the data, as when you hit the 100 W capable cables, you have some really thick wire strands inside the cables and it makes the cables very stiff and almost rigid. Click to expand.Have you actually compared the cables?
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