A Hub's speed is determined by it's type.
Are you speaking of a networking hub (also called a bridge)? Or do you mean a USB Hub? Or a Firewire hub? All of these have different speeds.
Most commonly would probably be a network hub, which is commonly limited to 10/100 mb Ethernet speeds.
A USB Hub, if 2.0 is limited to 480mb/s over all it's ports.
Hope that helps!
Get a high speed hub.
No, a 10 speed cassette cannot be used on an 11 speed hub. The cassette and hub must match in terms of speed for proper compatibility.
To use an 11-speed cassette on an 8-speed hub, you would need to use a spacer to fill the extra space on the hub. This will allow the cassette to fit properly and function with the 8-speed hub.
No, you cannot use an 8-speed cassette on a 10-speed hub. The cassette and hub must match in terms of speed for proper compatibility and function.
No, you cannot use a 9-speed cassette on an 11-speed hub. The cassette and hub must have the same number of speeds to be compatible.
No, you cannot use an 11-speed cassette on a 9-speed hub. The cassette and hub must have matching speeds for proper compatibility.
No, you cannot use an 8-speed cassette on an 11-speed hub. The cassette and hub must have the same number of speeds for proper compatibility.
No, you cannot use a 7-speed cassette on an 8-speed hub. The cassette and hub must match in terms of speeds for proper compatibility and function.
No, you cannot use a 9-speed cassette on a 10-speed hub. The cassette and hub must match in terms of speeds for proper compatibility and function.
No, you cannot use an 8-speed cassette on a 7-speed hub. The hub and cassette must match in terms of speeds for proper compatibility and function.
No a hub will not speed up your connection, your connection is based on the ISP. A hub sends the information to every computer on the network until it finds the computer that sent the request.
The Generic USB Hub is a HI-SPEED USB device and will function at reduced speed when plugged into a non-HI-SPEED port