• USB 3.2 is not USB Power Delivery or USB Battery Charging.
USB Type-C
USB Type-C is a new physical connector. The connector itself can support various exciting new USB standards.
Alternate Mode
USB Type-C is a new connector standard that is very small. It is about a third the size of an old USB Type-A plug. This is a single
connector standard that every device should be able to use. USB Type-C ports can support a variety of different protocols using
“alternate modes,” which allows you to have adapters that can output HDMI, VGA, DisplayPort, or other types of connections from that
single USB port
USB Power Delivery
The USB PD specification is also closely intertwined with USB Type-C. Currently, smartphones, tablets, and other mobile devices often
use a USB connection to charge. A USB 2.0 connection provides up to 2.5 watts of power — that'll charge your phone, but that's about
it. A laptop might require up to 60 watts, for example. The USB Power Delivery specification ups this power delivery to 100 watts. It's bi-
directional, so a device can either send or receive power. And this power can be transferred at the same time the device is transmitting
data across the connection.
This could spell the end of all those proprietary laptop charging cables, with everything charging via a standard USB connection. You could
charge your laptop from one of those portable battery packs you charge your smartphones and other portable devices from today. You
could plug your laptop into an external display connected to a power cable, and that external display would charge your laptop as you used
it as an external display — all via the one little USB Type-C connection. To use this, the device and the cable have to support USB Power
Delivery. Just having a USB Type-C connection doesn't necessarily mean they do.
Thunderbolt 3 over USB Type-C
Thunderbolt 3 brings Thunderbolt to USB Type-C at speeds up to 40 Gbps, creating one compact port that does it all - delivering the
fastest, most versatile connection to any dock, display or data device like an external hard drive. Thunderbolt 3 uses a USB Type-C
connector/port to connect to supported peripherals.
1. Thunderbolt 3 uses USB Type-C connector and cables - It is compact and reversible
2. Thunderbolt 3 supports speed up to 40 Gbps
3. DisplayPort 1.4 – compatible with existing DisplayPort monitors, devices and cables
4. USB Power Delivery - Up to 130W on supported computers
Key Features of Thunderbolt 3 over USB Type-C
1. Thunderbolt, USB, DisplayPort and power on USB Type-C on a single cable (features vary between different products)
2. USB Type-C connector and cables which are compact and reversible
3. Supports Thunderbolt Networking (*varies between different products)
4. Supports up to 4K displays
5. Up to 40 Gbps
NOTE:
Data transfer speed may vary between different devices.
Thunderbolt Icons
Figure 1. Thunderbolt Iconography Variations
Technology and components
11
Summary of Contents for Latitude 5310
Page 1: ...Dell Latitude 5310 Service Manual Regulatory Model P97G Regulatory Type P97G002 ...
Page 42: ...2 Route the speaker cable through the routing guides 42 Disassembly and reassembly ...
Page 63: ...9 Release the coin cell battery from the palmrest Disassembly and reassembly 63 ...
Page 66: ...3 Place the coin cell battery into its slot on the plamrest 66 Disassembly and reassembly ...
Page 76: ...3 Seat the system chassis on the display assembly 76 Disassembly and reassembly ...
Page 89: ...3 Reroute the smart card reader cable Disassembly and reassembly 89 ...
Page 93: ...Disassembly and reassembly 93 ...
Page 100: ...100 Disassembly and reassembly ...