Brydge Stone Pro Thunderbolt 3 Multiport Hub review

We use affiliate links. If you buy something through the links on this page, we may earn a commission at no cost to you. Learn more.

Brydge StonePro 1

REVIEW – As I have discussed before…dongles, docks, and hubs are a needed reality in today’s near port-less world. With a majority of laptop manufactures eliminating many of our classic input and output options, there are still those of us who need something to bridge the gap between them and a single port to rule them all. I guess the minimalist in me agrees with the concept of USB-C/Thunderbolt but my inner realist definitely has issue when I need to connect an optical drive or access a SD card. To help with this disconnect, the folks at Brydge have recently released the Stone Pro Hub that provides you a solid suite of ports with a single cable connection to your Thunderbolt 3 enabled laptop…let’s check it out. 

Brydge StonePro 2

What is it?

The Brydge Stone Pro is a horizontally oriented multi-port dock with power delivery and nearly every type of data ports one could need, all connected to your computer via a single Thunderbolt 3 cable.

Brydge StonePro 3

What’s in the box?

  • Stone Pro Multiport Hub
  • Thunderbolt 3 Cable (18 in/0.5 m) 40 Gb/s
  • Power Supply (180 W)
  • Localized Cables (1 x US/CA/MX and 1 x AU/NZ/CN)
  • User Manual

Brydge StonePro 4

The back of dock has all the ports: two-way audio/microphone, USB-C port, 3 x 3.1 Gen 1 USB-A ports, gigabit Ethernet port, 2 x Thunderbolt 3 ports, standard 4K DisplayPort, and the 180W DC input power port. The right side of the Stone Pro has a full-sized SD card slot. 

Hardware specs

  • Power: 180W DC Input
  • Compatible Operating Systems: All Thunderbolt 3 enabled devices
  • Display support:
    • Thunderbolt – Single @ 5K/60 Hz& Dual @ 4K/60 Hz
    • DisplayPort – Single @ 4K/60 Hz & Dual @ 4K/60 Hz
  • Dimensions: 8.19 in (208 mm) x 3.23 in (82 mm) x 0.71 in (18 mm)
  • Weight: 0.96 lb (435 g)
  • Case Material: Zinc, rubber, and plastic

Brydge StonePro 5

  • Port Overview:
    – 2 x Thunderbolt 3
    – 1 x USB-C (3.1 Gen 2: 10 Gb/s)
    – 3 x USB-A (3.1 Gen 1: 5 Gb/s)
    – 1 x DisplayPort (Dual 4K/60 Hz, Single 4K/60 Hz)
    – 1 x SD Card (SDXC UHS-II)
    – 1 x Ethernet (Gigabit)
    – 1 x Audio/Mic
    – 1 x Dock Power

  • Warranty: One year

Design and features

Brydge StonePro 6

The Stone Pro dock is nicely constructed with a machined zinc housing, rubber on the base, and plastic on the back. The metal has a matte finish and colored space gray to match my MacBook Pro. The dock weighs a pound, giving it a solid quality feel to it. On a funny note: I had just assumed the Stone Pro’s casing was aircraft grade aluminum but after diving into the specs discovered it wasn’t. Aluminum is typically the standard these days for tech accessories and when manufactures use another material/metal I wonder why.

Brydge StonePro 7

The Stone Pro has a rubber base that keeps the dock where you place it on your desk. Like the rest of the Stone Pro, the rubber pad also has a well made, quality feel to it. 

Brydge StonePro 8

The top of the Stone Pro has a narrow rubber strip/bumper along upper edge that your computer rests on. The strip keeps your laptop from sliding around and the dock & laptop from scratching each other. 

Brydge StonePro 9

The Stone Pro has a decent angle to its wedge shape allowing your laptop to rest on the rubber strip at the top of the dock. As I mentioned above, the right side of the dock has a full-sized SD card slot. 

Brydge StonePro 10

Setup

Setting up the Stone Pro is extremely simple and easy. Just connect all your cables, monitors, peripherals, drives, etc to the back of the dock then the Thunderbolt 3 cable to your laptop and you’re good to go. 

Performance

The speed performance of the dock was zippy…with any slowdowns being in the infrastructure of my home network than anything else. The WiFi and wired network speeds were equivalent when on the internet or accessing our NAS. Either way, the bottom line is for what I do the Stone Pro dock didn’t slow me down at all. I connected the dock to my 34″ 4K USB-C monitor and everything worked as I had hoped. The Thunderbolt connection supports either a single 5K or dual 4K monitor(s) both @60 Hz. The DisplayPort supports up to 2 x 4K monitors @60 Hz. File transfer speeds were what you would expect/hope for. According to Brydge the USB-A has speeds up to 5Gbps, the USB-C is 10Gbps, the Thunderbolt 3 port can support an eyebrow-raising 40Gbps, and ethernet is gigabit…all of which is pretty standard these days.

I was surprised how warm the dock got after extended use. My guess was the power flow thru the dock and MacBook Pro exhaust vents sitting directly on top of the dock added up. Plus the fact the MBPro covers the Stone Pro entirely with a lot of overhang that doesn’t allow for much heat dissipation. 

What I like

  • Excellent construction
  • Made from quality materials
  • Wide variety of ports
  • Full-sized SD card slot
  • Fast charging/power delivery
  • Rubber base keeps dock in place
  • Small compact form factor/hides under your laptop

What needs to be improved

  • Difficult accessing ports and SD card slot
  • Dock gets surprisingly warm with a computer sitting on top of it

Brydge StonePro 11

There are a handful of ways you could use the Stone Pro to connect your Thunderbolt 3 enabled laptop in your desk space. Here you can see it with my 16″ MacBook Pro on top of it. This works well but I will most likely Macgyver (at least) the laptop to sit higher to match the height of my monitor. 

Brydge StonePro 12

You can also use the Stone Pro in conjunction with Brydge’s vertical dock or independently connected to various monitors with your laptop elsewhere on your deck. 

Final thoughts

The Stone Pro Thunderbolt 3 Multiport Hub works very well. It’s many ports, video options, and full-sized SD card slot give you all (or at least most) of the ports still needed in today’s tech world. The docks ability to manage cable cutter and provide a single cable solution for connectivity and power is definitely better than having a handful of cables all connected to your laptop (aka the “good ol’ days”). I guess in reality, I prefer the tech-Zen the Stone Pro hub single connection brings to my desk vs the cable clutter of the past.

Price: $329.99 (on sale for $239.99)
Where to buy: The Stone Pro is available on Amazon and directly from Brydge.
Source: The sample of this product was provided by Brydge.

2 thoughts on “Brydge Stone Pro Thunderbolt 3 Multiport Hub review”




  1. Gadgeteer Comment Policy - Please read before commenting

Leave a Reply to Julie Strietelmeier Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *