In rare cases, it has been noted that the network sharing software may cause Windows 10 & 11 systems to Blue Screen. If you experience this issue, please follow this short guide to remedy the situation.
4 Port USB 2.0 Over IP Network Device Sharing Hub
Incorporate network device sharing in your next install with the 4-Port USB 2.0 Over IP Hub. Designed for seamless integration into modern infrastructures, this USB over IP hub allows remote access to USB devices over a TCP/IP network. Ideal for businesses managing distributed environments, this hub makes it easy to share USB devices with multiple clients across a LAN network. With support for screw-locking ports, secure data transmission, and real-time device management, this hub is perfect for demanding industrial and IoT applications where stability and reliability are paramount.
Key Features and Benefits
- USB Over IP Connectivity: Enables USB devices to be accessed over a LAN network, providing remote clients with easy, reliable device sharing.
- Secure Screw-Locking Ports: Equipped with screw-lock USB Type-A connectors to prevent accidental disconnections, ensuring uninterrupted operation.
- Versatile Network Sharing: Share multiple USB devices with various clients across your network, streamlining workflows and increasing efficiency.
- High-Speed USB 2.0 Support: Delivers robust USB 2.0 performance, ensuring compatibility with a wide range of devices and maintaining data integrity.
- IoT Ready: Ideal for IoT infrastructure, allowing remote management and connection of USB devices in distributed industrial settings.
- Metal Enclosure: Durable, industrial-grade metal housing ensures longevity, protecting against physical wear and electromagnetic interference in harsh environments.
- Flexible Power Options: Supports DC 7~24V input, accommodating a wide range of power sources for diverse installation environments.
- Gigabit Ethernet: Built-in Gigabit Ethernet port ensures high-speed data transfer, enabling fast and efficient device access and sharing across your network.
Package Contents:
- 4 port USB 2.0 Over IP Hub
- 12V 3A output power adapter and cord
- Software driver disc
- Paper installation guide
- 2 pin Phoenix connector
*Surface Mounting screws not included.
Alternate Model No.: NET-USB-4A
SSDguy –
Allows you to have USB support from your virtual machines (I run VMware ESXi Hypervisor), from anywhere in your home network.
So in other words, if your hypervisor machine is buried in your basement, you can have this unit up in your office, and have devices like scanners, printers, flash drives etc, plugged in at your desk and access your VM over remote desktop on your laptop to make it seem like that pc is right next to you.
killalot4000 –
First off, you need some networking experience to work with this device.
The device is pretty straight forward. I am using it for external hard drives to access them over the network from multiple computers. Also, you have to have the device in the same subnet to be able to use the server. Install the software was easy to do. The server tells you to use windows device removal feature and then stop the device. The device sometimes wants to crash for some reason sometimes. If you just stop all transfers on the device and use the servers manager program to remove the hard drives, it will just give a warning saying that could lead to data loss if transfers are currently active etc, and seems to work a lot better with the server.
Am able to get about 20-50 MBps transfer, which is typical for usb 2.0 speeds over the gigabit network that I have them on. Once I fill up the hard drive using esata which is faster, I just put the drives on the usb server and access them when need stuff off them, so speed is not really a priority.
Mounts devices to your computer as if they were plugged into your computers usb port. This device will work with printers and cd-rom which i have not tried, but have tried usb sticks which work fine. The true name of the hard drive does not show up in the manager, which can make for tricky guessing of which drive is which. The true name will show up once you mount the hard drive to your computer though.
You are able to set passwords for the usb servers, tell it to use dhcp due to the server itself needs a ip address to be able to share drives. You can manually assign ip addresses also if need to. There is idle timeouts also. I tried to put a usb hub into the server, it will detect it, but will not work with them for some reason. Not all devices are supported by the server. This covers the main things that I have looked over that I need to use.
May cost more and was hesitant at first as having never used a device like this before, but well worth the money. The device didn’t have no reviews either, which made left me hoping that wouldn’t be a disappointment. Will be ordering more of these devices.