Two displays on one Thunderbolt port is asking a lot, if it works at all then it's likely by "cheating" with compressed video. Windows will support two displays on a single Thunderbolt port but you pay for it in a different way, lower video performance. If connecting two displays by one Thunderbolt cable is important to you then you are going to have to pay for it. These eGPU docks will tend to have other ports like USB and Ethernet but some do not as their function is to be a GPU, not a general purpose dock, and so may lack such ports as they take valuable bandwidth. These are docks with a primary function of adding additional graphics processing, though this processing is available to be used on an internal display as well as external displays. Another means to get an external GPU is with a box that is clearly labeled an external GPU. Some docks have DisplayLink GPUs built-in to them for multiple displays.
Someone could plug in a dock with a DisplayPort output and USB, and then use a USB GPU like those made by DisplayLink to drive the second display. The exceptions to this are displays controlled by a separate GPU. It's in their support page on connecting displays: This means one port supports only one display.Īpple states on their website that computers with M1 and Thunderbolt 4 support only one display per port. The main issue is Apple does not support MST, multi-stream transport, over DisplayPort. This has been a long time complaint of Apple computers and it does not appear Apple is going to change this. There are exceptions that I'll get into but generally no, that is not possible.
DOCKING STATION FOR MAC M1 PRO
Is it possible to connect two external 4K60 monitors to a M1 Pro macbook using a single Thunderbolt 4 port, more specifically using a dock?