Hi guys, a bit of a history to this one and it ties back into the last time I posted here for a similar issue - about 3 years or so ago.
Anyway - back in July 2022 I purchased the ASUS Zenbook Space Edition laptop. Great machine but ran into issues using it with my Plugable dock. I spent months trying to troubleshoot it , even getting a new dock sent to me by Plugable. I thought initially that it was somehow tied to the whole modern standby stuff, then figured it must have just been the laptop's ports that were dodgy since re-installing Windows twice from scratch never fixed the issue.
Sadly I stopped using the Zenbook after a few months and it became a rather expensive 'mistake' because I couldn't get any stability out of it - I shelved it and its never really been used three years since. A couple of weeks ago - randomly I started thinking about this problem again, and threw it at ChatGPT. Gave it a descrption of all the hardware involved, and the problems encountered.
It spat back at me that it was 95% certain it was a display link problem. Apparently, Plugable docks rely on DisplayLink chips, which don’t use the GPU’s native video output. Instead, they compress video in software via the CPU and then send it over USB. When the CPU then comes under load, or something that requires power draw (like charging the laptop), the video stream collapses. The external screen would flicker, blackout and then reset. A minute or two would pass and it would happen again. Another few minutes, and again. It was more stable when the laptop wasn't charging, but as soon as I put any real load on the CPU or do something even a tiny bit heavy, boom the screens would blank. It just wasn't sustainable. I wasn't aware of this particular issue, and at no time did Plugable's support team mention it could be the issue - why would they? To do so would mean they would have to admit the core tech in their product doesn't really work properly (or at least didn't 3 years ago)
The 'solution' was to get something proper USB-C that could run in AltDisplay mode. So, since I was planning on getting a new monitor anyway - I jumped on it. Got one of the Dell 34" Ultrawide screens with the USB-C hub capability. Its been flawless with the Zenbook, not a single issue. So it seems that ChatGPT 'fixed' an issue I just couldn't resolve at the time and given the Zenbook a second lease of technical life. Kudos to the AI haha!
That being said - it HAS uncovered another issue. More to do with the Thunderbolt 4 ports on this model laptop. There are two of them on the left side of the chassis. The top port is flawless with the Dell monitor, no issues during regular operation or charging the laptop. The lower port however, while it charges the laptop there is no video stability whatsoever, with the screen flicking on and off and glitching and resetting every three seconds like clockwork. Now, my understanding of this laptop's specs was meant to be that BOTH ports support power delivery/charging and video. Experience with this new Dell screen however would indicate only one of the ports is actually capable of doing this. This issue replicates a problem a user was having for one of our clients a few weeks ago in a similar setup. It was one of the Dell Latitude 5400 laptops, two USB-C ports on the side but only one of the ports is marked for power delivery. I told the user he was using the wrong port basically. When you use the port marked for power delivery - there's no external screen issues. When you try and use the other port, the laptop actually complains that the port in use isn't suitable etc etc.
I do apologise that this has been a long winded post and I've taken time to get to the point, but my question basically is: Despite my Asus having two TB4 ports that are supposed to be exactly the same, is there anyone, anywhere who knows or can confirm if only ONE port actually works to provide power delivery/charging? Has anyone experienced anything similar?
*If you've read all of this I truly do thank you for your time
Matchwood
Anyway - back in July 2022 I purchased the ASUS Zenbook Space Edition laptop. Great machine but ran into issues using it with my Plugable dock. I spent months trying to troubleshoot it , even getting a new dock sent to me by Plugable. I thought initially that it was somehow tied to the whole modern standby stuff, then figured it must have just been the laptop's ports that were dodgy since re-installing Windows twice from scratch never fixed the issue.
Sadly I stopped using the Zenbook after a few months and it became a rather expensive 'mistake' because I couldn't get any stability out of it - I shelved it and its never really been used three years since. A couple of weeks ago - randomly I started thinking about this problem again, and threw it at ChatGPT. Gave it a descrption of all the hardware involved, and the problems encountered.
It spat back at me that it was 95% certain it was a display link problem. Apparently, Plugable docks rely on DisplayLink chips, which don’t use the GPU’s native video output. Instead, they compress video in software via the CPU and then send it over USB. When the CPU then comes under load, or something that requires power draw (like charging the laptop), the video stream collapses. The external screen would flicker, blackout and then reset. A minute or two would pass and it would happen again. Another few minutes, and again. It was more stable when the laptop wasn't charging, but as soon as I put any real load on the CPU or do something even a tiny bit heavy, boom the screens would blank. It just wasn't sustainable. I wasn't aware of this particular issue, and at no time did Plugable's support team mention it could be the issue - why would they? To do so would mean they would have to admit the core tech in their product doesn't really work properly (or at least didn't 3 years ago)
The 'solution' was to get something proper USB-C that could run in AltDisplay mode. So, since I was planning on getting a new monitor anyway - I jumped on it. Got one of the Dell 34" Ultrawide screens with the USB-C hub capability. Its been flawless with the Zenbook, not a single issue. So it seems that ChatGPT 'fixed' an issue I just couldn't resolve at the time and given the Zenbook a second lease of technical life. Kudos to the AI haha!
That being said - it HAS uncovered another issue. More to do with the Thunderbolt 4 ports on this model laptop. There are two of them on the left side of the chassis. The top port is flawless with the Dell monitor, no issues during regular operation or charging the laptop. The lower port however, while it charges the laptop there is no video stability whatsoever, with the screen flicking on and off and glitching and resetting every three seconds like clockwork. Now, my understanding of this laptop's specs was meant to be that BOTH ports support power delivery/charging and video. Experience with this new Dell screen however would indicate only one of the ports is actually capable of doing this. This issue replicates a problem a user was having for one of our clients a few weeks ago in a similar setup. It was one of the Dell Latitude 5400 laptops, two USB-C ports on the side but only one of the ports is marked for power delivery. I told the user he was using the wrong port basically. When you use the port marked for power delivery - there's no external screen issues. When you try and use the other port, the laptop actually complains that the port in use isn't suitable etc etc.
I do apologise that this has been a long winded post and I've taken time to get to the point, but my question basically is: Despite my Asus having two TB4 ports that are supposed to be exactly the same, is there anyone, anywhere who knows or can confirm if only ONE port actually works to provide power delivery/charging? Has anyone experienced anything similar?
*If you've read all of this I truly do thank you for your time
Matchwood
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Manufacturer/Model
- ASUS Zenbook Space Edition
- CPU
- Intel i7
- Memory
- 16GB




