One USB-C port becomes a practical workstation
This hub solves a familiar laptop problem: too few ports for charging, storage, and accessories at the same time. Orico keeps the footprint small, so a single USB-C connection can handle everyday expansion without turning your desk into cable clutter.
For users of slim notebooks and tablets, that matters more than raw port count. The design is aimed at quick file transfers, memory card access, and pass-through power, which is exactly the kind of utility that makes a compact hub worth keeping in a bag.
PD60W pass-through for lighter charging setups
The PD60W rating means the hub is built to let power continue through the USB-C chain while you use the other ports. In practice, that helps when you want to charge a laptop, keep a phone topped up, or run accessories from one wall adapter instead of juggling multiple chargers.
This is not a full docking station, so it will not replace high-end video outputs or Ethernet-heavy office rigs. It does make more sense for people who want a clean travel hub for office work, study, and mobile editing, where charging support is more useful than extra display features.

SD and TF access that suits creators and backup jobs
The built-in reader is the feature that gives this model a real workflow edge. Users who move photos from cameras, drones, or action cams can pull files straight from cards instead of hunting for a separate reader, which saves time and reduces one more item to carry.
According to the single available customer review, the product arrived looking good after more than two weeks, which is a modest but positive sign. That aligns with Orico’s usual reputation in the AliExpress Singapore market for neat industrial design and dependable accessory hardware rather than flashy extras.
Aluminum housing and a short 15 cm cable
The aluminum body should help the hub feel cooler and more solid than basic plastic splitters. The 15 cm cable length is short enough to sit close to a laptop edge, which keeps the setup tidy and reduces dangling strain on the port.

That short reach is useful on a desk, but it can feel restrictive if your laptop sits far from the edge of a stand. If you want a hub that disappears into a portable setup, the size works well; if you need placement flexibility, a longer-cabled model may be easier to live with.
Who this hub suits best
- Students who need card reading and charging support in one compact accessory.
- Office users who want a clean USB-C expansion for flash drives and peripherals.
- Creators who move files from SD or TF cards during light editing sessions.
It is a straightforward utility product rather than a feature-packed dock, and that clarity is part of its appeal. The next question is whether the port mix is enough for your own daily carry.

















