UGREEN Revodok Max 313 Thunderbolt 4 Dock (13-in-1)
A stable, port-packed Thunderbolt 4 dock with 8K support and SD 4.0 readers — but 60W charging and a $399 price keep it from being the obvious value pick.
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What we like
- Rock-solid stability — no dropouts or reconnect roulette
- 13 ports including DisplayPort 2.1, HDMI 2.1, and dual TB4
- SD 4.0 and microSD 4.0 (UHS-II) slots, rare at this tier
- Single 8K@60Hz or dual 4K@60Hz output
Could be better
- Only 60W laptop charging — light for 16-inch creator laptops
- Triple-display claim is unreliable in practice
- $399 is close enough to the CalDigit TS4 to give pause
Full Review
UGREEN’s Revodok Max 313 is the brand’s swing at the premium Thunderbolt 4 dock market — the territory CalDigit and OWC have owned for years. It’s a 13-in-1 box with a genuinely deep port list, true TB4 bandwidth, and card readers most docks skip. The catch is that the headline value story doesn’t fully hold up once you read the spec sheet closely.
Build and Ports
The port selection is the strongest argument here. You get DisplayPort 2.1, HDMI 2.1, two downstream Thunderbolt 4 ports, a mix of 10Gbps and 5Gbps USB-A, a 10Gbps USB-C data port, gigabit Ethernet, and a 3.5mm jack. The standout is the dual card reader: full-size SD 4.0 and microSD 4.0, both UHS-II. If you offload camera footage daily, that alone can justify the dock over cheaper options that force a dongle.
Performance and Displays
In day-to-day use, the Max 313 is dependable — reviewers consistently call it stable, with no dropped connections or wake-from-sleep gremlins. It drives a single 8K@60Hz display or dual 4K@60Hz cleanly. The “triple 4K” marketing, however, is shaky: in testing, a third display frequently refused to come up across multiple laptops. Treat this as a two-monitor dock and you won’t be disappointed. Storage throughput is also middling — fine for backups, not the fastest TB4 dock for scratch disks.
The Power Problem
At 60W of host charging, the Max 313 trails the 90–96W you get from rivals. A MacBook Air or 13-inch laptop is fine; a 16-inch MacBook Pro or a creator PC under load will slowly drain. For a dock pitched at creators, that’s the real weak spot.
Who Should Buy This
Buy the Max 313 if you want a stable, SD 4.0-equipped TB4 dock for a lighter laptop and a two-monitor setup. But at $399 it sits awkwardly close to the more polished CalDigit TS4 ($449), which charges at 98W. If charging headroom matters, spend the extra $50 on the TS4 — and if you mainly need ports over Thunderbolt speed, a USB-C dock like UGREEN’s own Revodok Pro 313 saves you over $250.