SABRENT USB 3.0 to SATA Exterior Arduous Drive Lay-Flat Docking Station for two.5 or 3.5in HDD, SSD [Support UASP] (EC-DFLT)
Original price was: $39.99.$26.79Current price is: $26.79.
Value: $39.99 - $26.79
(as of Apr 15, 2025 05:16:31 UTC – Particulars)
Product Description
The SABRENT EC DFLT SATA Lay Flat Docking Station helps the direct insertion of Desktop 2.5″/3.5″ SATA Arduous Drives. It’s a caseless answer that makes swapping onerous drives simpler than ever earlier than. Plus, now you possibly can reap the benefits of the lightening pace of USB 3.0 to rapidly switch information as much as 5 Gbps!
Options:
Helps Commonplace Desktop 2.5″/3.5″ SATA Arduous Drives. .On/Off energy change.LED gentle signifies Energy and Exercise standing.Scorching swappable, plug and play, no drivers wanted.Reverse appropriate with USB 1.1 & USB 2.0.Switch Charges As much as 5 Gbps w/USB 3.0Transfer Charges As much as 480 Mbps w/USB 2.0
System necessities:
Obtainable USB 3.0 for prime pace information transferReverse appropriate with USB 1.1 & USB 2.0.Home windows: 2000/XP/Vista/7/8/8.1/10 (Each 32 bit & 64 bit variations)MAC: OS X
Bundle Contents:
SABRENT EC DFLT Lay Flat DockingPower SupplyUSB 3.0 cableUser Guide
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Buyer Critiques
4.6 out of 5 stars 66,024
4.6 out of 5 stars 8,006
4.5 out of 5 stars 8,932
4.4 out of 5 stars 35,907
4.4 out of 5 stars 35,907
4.3 out of 5 stars 8,096
Value
$9.99$9.99 $9.99$9.99 $11.79$11.79 $26.79$26.79 $28.99$28.99 $31.95$31.95
Mannequin #
EC-UASP EC-OCUB EC-UK30 EC-DFLT EC-KSL3 EC-DFFN
Measurement Compatibility:
2.5″ SSD 2.5″ SSD 2.5″ SSD 2.5 & 3.5 SSD 2.5 & 3.5 SSD 2.5 & 3.5 SSD
Capability Supported:
8TB 8TB 8TB 20TB 20TB 20TB
Switch Velocity:
As much as 5 Gbps As much as 5 Gbps As much as 5 Gbps As much as 5 Gbps As much as 625 MB/s As much as 5 Gbps
Cable:
USB 3.0 Sort-A USB 3.0 Sort-B to Sort-A USB 3.0 Sort-A USB 3.0 Sort-A USB 3.0 Sort-B to Sort-A USB 3.0 Sort-A
UASP:
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
Plug and Play:
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
Materials:
ABS ABS Aluminum ABS Aluminum ABS
Meeting:
Software Free Software Free Screws set with screws driver included Software Free Software Free Software Free
Fan Cooling:
— — — — —
✓
Helps all 2.5 and three.5-inch SATA drives. Be sure to have the most recent firmware put in for this dock to work with bigger capacities. Firmware updates could be downloaded on our web site.
Connects through SuperSpeed USB 3.0 (as much as 10x as quick as USB 2.0).
UASP (USB Hooked up SCSI Protocol) assist for even sooner efficiency. UASP requires UASP succesful host system
Serial ATA bus as much as 6Gbps Sign bandwidth for quick storage backups
This Docking station comes with a free obtain of Acronis True Picture for Sabrent software program for straightforward cloning.
Prospects say
Prospects discover the onerous drive enclosure works flawlessly and is straightforward to arrange, with clear directions, and admire its speedy USB 3.0 interface that maintains high-sustained learn/write speeds. They take into account it good worth for cash, with one buyer mentioning it saved them $300 in file restoration prices, and so they like its design, with one noting its brushed end. The construct high quality receives blended suggestions – whereas some say it holds up effectively with common use, others discover it seems like low-cost plastic. The match can also be blended, with some saying their drives match completely whereas others discover it a bit large.
13 reviews for SABRENT USB 3.0 to SATA Exterior Arduous Drive Lay-Flat Docking Station for two.5 or 3.5in HDD, SSD [Support UASP] (EC-DFLT)
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![SABRENT USB 3.0 to SATA Exterior Arduous Drive Lay-Flat Docking Station for two.5 or 3.5in HDD, SSD [Support UASP] (EC-DFLT) SABRENT USB 3.0 to SATA Exterior Arduous Drive Lay-Flat Docking Station for two.5 or 3.5in HDD, SSD [Support UASP] (EC-DFLT)](https://i3.wp.com/m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81Y8qIYM2eL._AC_SL1500_.jpg?w=1920&resize=1920,1920&ssl=1)
Original price was: $39.99.$26.79Current price is: $26.79.
Leo J. Kennedy –
Excellent reliable product. Easily create external storage for a low price.
This thing is awesome! It works like a dream, and for $26 bucks, I have as many Terabytes of storage as I have hard drives lying around. Why would I pay Big Data several thousand $ for storage over a decade when all I have to do is slide a drive into this and I’m off and running? It’s literally plug & play. It’s fast, and so far, very reliable. I use a third-party piece of software to partition my drives instead of Windows 11 or Mac Sequoia, just because I like the interface better. But, I took 1 TB and 2 TB drives out of retired computers, formatted them to exFAT, and I instantly have 3 TB of external storage I can access from my Windows and Mac machines locally. A friend asked what do I do if the drive fails. With a product like this, make a few of them. A good old 7200 RPM 2TB drive is about $65. So for about $90 bucks you can have storage that will last about 20 years sitting in a desk drawer.
RetiredEE –
2.5 years later, I upgrade my rating from 2 stars to 5 stars!
I bought the Sabrent ED-DFLT enclosure so that I could format various hard drives on my iMac. It’s a rather long story, which I’ll shorten to this: I confirmed that the Sabrent enclosure worked when I received it by using an old 2TB drive. I then tossed the box and waited for my 6TB Western Digital Caviar Green drive to arrive from Amazon a couple of weeks later. When plopped into the Sabrent, the new drive showed up on my Mac’s desktop. I then set about creating a large encrypted disk image on the drive. It chugged away for 4 full days, seemingly working for the first 3. But after day 4, the formatting was clearly hung, and it had taken my Mac down with it. Upon rebooting, the drive no longer showed up at all. Disk Utility could not even see it. After a lot of detective work, too long to describe here, I confirmed that the 6TB drive was still working fine, but the Sabrent logic board had died, obviously a case of infant mortality.The good news: it can handle large capacity hard drives. The bad news: not for very long…And of course, since I tossed the boxing, there is no returning the Sabrent. I therefore spent $23 on a brick, although it won’t break me. This case of infant mortality is probably just a fluke, but an annoying one when it happens to you. I should have kept the box a while longer. My bad.UPDATE 1/2118: To Sabrent’s great credit, and this is going back about 2.5 years ago, they stepped in and replaced the enclosure, no charge. I tested it but ran into issues trying to do the above formatting again, and threw it on my junk pile. With hindsight, I’m now realizing that the issue was most likely the hard drive I was using, which I got by ripping open a Western Digital external hard drive and removing it. There’s something odd about the firmware in these drives. They’re just “not right” when taken out of their manufacturer’s shell and fully exposed like this. I think my issue was the hard drive, and NOT Sabrent. Coupled with their excellent customer service, I’ve now increased the rating to five stars. Because …I just bought some 8TB Hitachi hard drives and it was time to format them, again with encryption. These are new, bare hard drives from Amazon, not something I ripped out of an external HD box! Fortunately, I still had the Sabrent enclosure, so I pulled one off the pile, attached the 12V/1.5A power adapter to it, put the 8TB drive in, connected to my Mac Mini, and just like that, the hard drive mounted on the desktop. I formatted it in HFS+, then created a new encrypted disk image, and let it run.This time, all went well. I discovered that if you open Sierra’s Activity Monitor and click on Disk Activity, you get a readout of how fast the data is moving across the interface. I was seeing it move between 110 – 160 MB/sec, averaging about 130 MB/sec. That’s not bad at all on my 2012 iMac with a 4-core i7 processor running Sierra (12.6). It’s not the fastest i7 there is, so you have to remember that there are calculations that first have to be made before the data can be spit out of the USB3 ports for writing. That takes time to execute, which has to slow transfers down somewhat. USB of any speed never hits its theoretical maximum anyway (4.8Gbps for USB3, or about 600 MB/sec). Considering I was getting only 25 MB/sec with USB2 on this same machine (theoretical maximum speed = 60 MB/sec), actual speeds are less than theoretical speeds by about the same factor for each version of USB. The full 8TB of writing took 17 hours, which averages out to 130 MB/sec, consistent with what I see in Activity Monitor. I would say that’s pretty good. I’m happy.Side note: I got to wondering about Sabrent’s advice to run a firmware update. I’m a Mac guy, but I have an old PC running XP. I thought I would take a stab at the upgrade. I downloaded it to the PC, but the update would not run at all. You tell it to RUN the update and nothing happens. My neighbor has a PC running Windows 10, so I took the dock, power supply, and a USB cable to his place. He downloaded the update to his PC, followed the .pdf instructions exactly, the interface presented is NOT what the .pdf shows, but tried running it anyway. Same issue: hit the RUN button and nothing happens. It doesn’t freeze or anything like that. It simply does nothing. So much for that!The key point I’m making is that this same dock that I bought 2.5 years ago (August 2015) easily sees my 8TB drives, runs flawlessly, and runs quite fast, all with no firmware update whatsoever. I don’t understand Sabrent’s statement that older docks (2.5 years old?) without an update are limited to 4TB. Not mine!I do not understand why other commenters can’t get it to work right. It works perfectly for me.Considering Sabrent’s great customer support, excellent USB3 performance, full support for an 8TB drive, and it’s very low price, I gotta give it 5 stars!UPDATE 1/30/2018: Plugging into two different iMacs running Snow Leopard (10.6.8), neither can see any drive plugged into it. Odd, since at one time it could/did. I don’t know what the difference is, but if you’re running Snow Leopard, you might consider passing on the Sabrent.UPDATE 2/12/2018: Okay, so the Sabrent isn’t happy with Snow Leopard. Separately, I plugged the Sabrent into my 2012 Mac Mini w/i7 processor and running Sierra (12.6). I plugged a second, different external USB3 drive enclosure to another port, loaded a pair of 8TB X300 Toshiba hard drives in each, and proceeded to move data from one drive to the other. Measured speed is about 130 MB/sec, which is about max transfer rates that these hard drives can deliver. No complaints!
Mike Parsons –
Great Choice for data recovery: External SATA drive case to use in data recovery
Very easy to unbox and add a disk. The outer case appears sturdy, and adding the assembly to my laptop’s configuration was straightforward. Only inconvenience was need for external power source and the size. It worked fine in my office environment, but was not something I’d use on the road.
Butchboy –
Great timesaver
Just cleaning my office up a bit to recycle old electronics and computer parts. I have about a dozen drives of various types (SSD, 3.5 HDD, 2.5 HDD) just sitting around. So before I send them to the recycler or give them away, I wanted to clean off all the data for security reasons. In the past, I would open up my desktop and connect each drive to a SATA cable one by one. This little box saves me from doing that.I connected the power cord and the USB to the box and it simply worked. I slide each drive into this device and was able to repartition the drives (using my own software) and set them up like they were brand new. Worked like a charm.My only complaint is that it is very hard to remove an SSD from the device. I couldn’t easily get my fingers around the drive to grab it because it was inserted up against the side wall of the box. If they would have offset the connectors a quarter inch from the inside of the box, it would have made things much easier. That said, this box saved me a bunch of time and was well worth the price.
R –
Have used it with both big and small SSD’s and HDD’s, with no problems to date.
Sabrent EC-DFLT- USB to SATA, SSD or HHD Tray with cover door. Easy to use. Plug USB cable to unit and computer. Plug power adapter to the unit and to outlet. Slide your 2.75 to 4.25, SSD or HHD strait into unit and turn on the power switch. Computer will recognize the drive. The cables are of an adequate length and the unit has worked flawlessly for me so far and I have used it with both big and small SSD’s and HDD’s for partitioning, formatting, whipping and data transfer with no problems to date. The housing is totally plastic so I can’t vouch for the durability. Note: You should also make sure to slide the drives strait in and strait out of the unit to prevent breaking any connectors.
DJ –
East set up and great value
Excellent drive enclosure. Easy to set up. Plugged the drive in, plugged in the enclosure and everything worked seamlessly!
Tim Roberts –
Feels Good, Works Great
I finally had the opportunity to use this device “in anger”. My wife’s 1TB NVMe was full. I bought a 2TB replacement. I followed the directions (!) and connected both drives, then plugged it in via USB-C to my Linux desktop. Less than 45 minutes later, the entire terabyte had been copied, exactly as it was supposed to.The device has the ability to do the copy off line, but it goes much, much, much slower.The unit itself is nice solid metal. It felt good, and all the connections were solid. Very much recommended.
adsicks –
Case feels flimsy but it has guts.
The case is a little flimsy, but the USB cable is nice and thick and the power supply seems solid. I just went through 10 old drives I had sitting around to see which were good and which weren’t. Worked like a charm. Nice and fast on USB3.
Hande Vee –
Excellent drive bay
Yvan Goossens –
It was a plug and play installation. It works without error and data transfer is fast.
Arian Shamil –
Ho acquistato questa dockstation USB 3.0 per semplificare e ottimizzare la mia postazione di lavoro e devo dire che svolge egregiamente il suo lavoro.Semplice e minimale, viene riconosciuta senza problemi e la velocita’ di trasferimento e’ buona.La qualità costruttiva è solida, con un design compatto e discreto, perfetto da tenere sulla scrivania senza ingombrare.L’installazione è stata semplice e immediata, senza bisogno di alcun driver aggiuntivo.In definitiva, questa dockstation USB 3.0 si è rivelata un acquisto eccellente per migliorare l’efficienza lavorativa e organizzare al meglio l’ambiente tecnologico. Consigliata a chi cerca praticità , velocità e affidabilità in un unico prodotto.
Wong Kuan Suan –
To connect old drives to extract old data back.3.5 and 2.5 drives are not an issue
MT –
Working as expected, supports hot swapping on Windows and Linux. Recommended at this price level.