| | Purpose | |----------|-------------| | UTH_SV_Setup.exe | Full‑featured installer (includes both 32‑bit and 64‑bit binaries). | | UASP.inf / UTHSV.inf | INF files for manual driver installation via Device Manager. | | ReadMe.txt | Quick start, version history, and known‑issue notes. | | Changelog.pdf | Detailed changes between releases (useful for developers). | | Signature.cer | Code‑signing certificate to avoid Windows “unsigned driver” warnings. |
Yes, once the Pi OS kernel includes UAS support (Raspberry Pi OS Bullseye onward). No special driver needed; just plug and play.
Numbers are averages from 5 runs using CrystalDiskMark 8 on a Dell XPS 15 (i7‑12700H).
The driver itself is Windows‑only, but the underlying chipset is supported by the Linux kernel’s usb-storage module with UAS enabled. If you need advanced features (e.g., encrypted volumes), use the orico‑uthsv open‑source module when it lands.
Open Device Manager , right‑click the Or
Often this is a power issue. Use the supplied Y‑cable (dual‑USB power) or connect the dock to a powered USB hub. Also, make sure the driver is the latest version, as older builds had a known power‑fluctuation bug.
If any of the above sounds like you, keep reading. When you download the driver from Orico’s website (or from the CD that ships with the product), you’ll typically get a ZIP file containing: