this post was submitted on 10 Aug 2024
13 points (100.0% liked)
Hardware
5453 readers
1 users here now
This is a community dedicated to the hardware aspect of technology, from PC parts, to gadgets, to servers, to industrial control equipment, to semiconductors.
Rules:
- Posts must be relevant to electronic hardware
- No NSFW content
- No hate speech, bigotry, etc
founded 5 years ago
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
PCIe is PCIe regardless. It should work, just be careful with unplugging things that aren't hotpluggable, both from the card itself and the cable.
I'd take the chance personally. I'm sure there are edge cases though, but I'd bet on it working.
Nice. I like what I hear. What's the best way to deal with this hotplugging situation? Power on the enclosure with the device plugged in first and then attach to the lappy via thunderbolt? Or something else? What happens if you mess that up, does anything physically break? Or just a crash that I can reboot from?
One last thing. One of the 2 products I'm looking at, the better of the 2 because it also comes with an m.2 slot and some extra ports, has instructions in a youtube video about connecting power supply cables to the GPU itself as well as the enclosure. My card only consumes 10w of power and doesn't take external power. If I connect a power supply to the enclosure and plug in the card, it should just draw power from the PCIe slot right?
With thunderbolt you can connect it whenever you please. Your OS doesn't initiate the thunderbolt connection until it's in the operating system anyways. Plug it in, turn it on it makes no difference. Disconnecting you need to make sure you safely eject the device or you will get a blue screen.
M.2 adapters are almost never hot plugable, those need to be done with your laptop off. That is literally the same as having a desktop and slotting in the card there. Just make sure your enclosure is off when you're connecting or disconnecting anything and you won't hurt anything.
I think the trouble is this decklink device is not ejectable. It's not storage. I can always be sure to power down the laptop before disconnect the enclosure perhaps.
Oh this is an interesting thing I might have missed. So, to be clear, when I want to use this device (thankfully not an all the time thing), I need to turn off the laptop, turn on the enclosure, hook up the laptop then power the laptop on? Is that about right? Or can I connect the enclosure to the laptop at any point laptop on or not, but if I want to physically power off the enclosure then I need to power off the laptop to first?
What typically happens if you don't follow best practice in these types of situations? Do you physically damage components or just crash the computer? Bit worried about busting my laptop because I did this wrong or a cat brushed a cable or something. Not the end of the world if I break the card or the enclosure I guess, but the laptop would be a painfully expensive lesson.