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Date:09/10/17

USB 3.2 Doubles Type-C Cable Speed

Scheduled to release any time now, the anticipated USB 3.2 spec  will double the number of lanes for data transfer. The USB 3.0 Promoter’s Group, in a press release earlier this year to pre-announce USB 3.2, stated, “USB Type-C cables were designed to support multi-lane operation to ensure a path for scalable performance. New USB 3.2 hosts and devices can now be designed as multi-lane solutions, allowing for up to two lanes of 5Gbps or two lanes of 10Gbps operation…a USB 3.2 host connected to a USB 3.2 storage device will now be capable of realizing over 2GBps data transfer performance over an existing USB Type-C™ cable that is certified for SuperSpeed USB 10Gbps.”
 
The new spec takes advantage of full-featured USB 3.1 Type-C cables, which have a total of 24 wires, of which eight are for supporting SuperSpeed; they also support alternate mode. Alternate mode expands the versatility of USB Type-C cables to support DisplayPort, HDMI, and Thunderbolt 3 (with more to come in PCI-e and Ethernet). USB 3.2 usurps alternate mode to use the extra wires in the Type-C cable, and this is how the speed is doubled with USB 3.2-compliant products. Note that doubling the speed has less to do with the Type-C cable, which only needs to support SuperSpeed and alternate mode in order to complete the upgrade to double the USB speed.
 
Note that “full-featured” means a USB cable that supports alternate mode. A USB Type-C cable that supports USB 3.1 Gen 1 (formerly USB 3.0) has a top speed of nearly 5 Gbps.  If a USB 3.1 Gen 1 Type-C cable also has enough wires to support alternate mode and connects two USB 3.2-compliant products, that cable will have a 10Gbps throughput. A full-featured USB Type-C cable that supports USB 3.1 Gen 2 has a top speed of 10Gbps, but if that same cable connects two USB 3.2-compliant products, the cable can pass 20Gbps.
 
One of the more confusing issues with the increasing complexity USB is the number of names and specifications concerning speed, cables, power delivery, and alternate technologies that USB Type-C cables support. It seems clear that alternate mode and USB 3.2 are mutually exclusive.
 
Type-C cables, now more universal than USB, lend themselves to multiple possibilities for confusion for consumers who might conclude that any USB Type-C cable “does it all.” A legitimate Type-C USB may support only USB 2.0 speeds, which means that it would only have 4 wires. At the other end of the spectrum, another USB Type-C cable can support up to 20Gbps (with USB 3.2-compliant products on both ends) can alternatively be used as an HDMI, DisplayPort, or Thunderbolt cable, or be used to communicate at 10Gbps while simultaneously powering (in either direction) up to 100W.
 
What’s more, USB packaging doesn’t clearly identify the modes of power operation or USB specification. The USB Implementers Forum (USB-IF) has established different logos to help identify what maximum speed the cable provides. The logos are the high-speed trident, the SuperSpeed trident, and the SuperSpeed 10 trident (a.k.a. SuperSpeed+). As of this writing, I was not able to find a logo to identify power ratings. However, a logo for the Certified USB Charger 45W was posted in mid-2016 on the USB.org site.
 
According to an STMicroelectronics data sheet , six types of C-to-C cables can be gleaned from the USB Type-C specification: One that does USB 2.0 only, one that does USB 3.1 Gen 1, and one that does USB 3.1 Gen 2. In addition, each separate cable can also have one of two power ratings for 3A (a regular Type-C cable) or 5A (cable/device/host that support USB-PD). Suffice it to say, USB Type-C connectors are not all automatically operational at USB 3.1 speeds, nor at 5A.
 
But again, this information isn’t available on USB package labels. According to the USB Implementers Group Forum—USB-IF, the group behind USB technology—Type-C will be used by over 2 billion devices by 2019, compounding the potential for confusion even more. As quoted from the USB-IF Developer Days Hong Kong USB-PD presentation on Day 2, “USB technology has evolved into highly complex and challenging designs.” It’s time for the USB-IF to host classes, online videos, or an edx.org course on how these cables work, what to expect, and what to look for. Not all compatible products are compliant, which makes a “buyer beware” situation for consumers. We want more from a single cable, but ironing out the wrinkles with the debut of the USB Type-C cable brings an awkward pause to the celebration of the most universal connector.




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