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Power supplies?



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 22nd 09, 12:46 AM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
Yousuf Khan
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Posts: 914
Default Power supplies?

It's possibly time to upgrade my power supply. Haven't shopped around
for one in ages. What's the new features that I have to look for these
days? My last PS was a 450W ATX from maybe 5 years ago. I expect my new
one would have to be at least 500W now.

I'm thinking I should get one with the low-speed 120 mm fans. And maybe
one with a motherboard fan speed connector?

Yousuf Khan
  #2  
Old March 22nd 09, 11:17 AM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
Jack
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Posts: 23
Default Power supplies?

Yousuf Khan wrote:
:: It's possibly time to upgrade my power supply. Haven't shopped
:: around for one in ages. What's the new features that I have to
:: look for these days? My last PS was a 450W ATX from maybe 5 years
:: ago. I expect my new one would have to be at least 500W now.
::
:: I'm thinking I should get one with the low-speed 120 mm fans. And
:: maybe one with a motherboard fan speed connector?

For sure, Yousuf, if I was still living in the States I would be buying my
PS from PC Power & Cooling. Check out the link:
http://www.pcpower.com/index.html

Geez, a PS from five years ago? Was this the PS involved with your computer
that you posted problems with SATA drives, Nvidia chipsets and corruption?
Hope not! Cheers.

J.



  #3  
Old March 22nd 09, 09:13 PM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
Yousuf Khan
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Posts: 914
Default Power supplies?

Jack wrote:
For sure, Yousuf, if I was still living in the States I would be buying my
PS from PC Power & Cooling. Check out the link:
http://www.pcpower.com/index.html


Well, okay, I'll note that down.

Know anything about Zalman PS's?

Geez, a PS from five years ago? Was this the PS involved with your computer
that you posted problems with SATA drives, Nvidia chipsets and corruption?
Hope not! Cheers.



Well, yes it's the same machine, since one of the suggestions was to
replace the PS, I've decided to give that solution a shot.

Looking at the specs these days, they seem to have multi-rail +12V
support. They range from dual-rail upto quad-rail. Not sure whether to
go with more or if two is enough?

Yousuf Khan
  #4  
Old March 23rd 09, 01:02 PM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
Jack
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 23
Default Power supplies?

Yousuf Khan wrote:
:: Jack wrote:
::: For sure, Yousuf, if I was still living in the States I would be
::: buying my PS from PC Power & Cooling. Check out the link:
::: http://www.pcpower.com/index.html
::
:: Well, okay, I'll note that down.
::
:: Know anything about Zalman PS's?

Never used one personally but friends who have built their own systems and
installed Zalman seem to be happy with them. They have a good rep here in
Spain.

::: Geez, a PS from five years ago? Was this the PS involved with
::: your computer that you posted problems with SATA drives, Nvidia
::: chipsets and corruption? Hope not! Cheers.
::
::
:: Well, yes it's the same machine, since one of the suggestions was
:: to replace the PS, I've decided to give that solution a shot.

With the problems you posted and now the fact you're using a five year old
PS, that's exactly what I'd do too.

:: Looking at the specs these days, they seem to have multi-rail +12V
:: support. They range from dual-rail upto quad-rail. Not sure
:: whether to go with more or if two is enough?

Hmmm. Read up on PC Power & Cooling's "Power Supply Myths Exposed." They
seem to indicate multirail designs have at least one major drawback. Maybe
DAYTRIPPER would jump in here???
http://www.pcpower.com/technology/myths/

J.


  #5  
Old March 23rd 09, 05:51 PM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
daytripper
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Posts: 265
Default Power supplies?

On Mon, 23 Mar 2009 14:02:46 +0100, "Jack" wrote:

Yousuf Khan wrote:
:: Jack wrote:
::: For sure, Yousuf, if I was still living in the States I would be
::: buying my PS from PC Power & Cooling. Check out the link:
::: http://www.pcpower.com/index.html
::
:: Well, okay, I'll note that down.
::
:: Know anything about Zalman PS's?

Never used one personally but friends who have built their own systems and
installed Zalman seem to be happy with them. They have a good rep here in
Spain.

::: Geez, a PS from five years ago? Was this the PS involved with
::: your computer that you posted problems with SATA drives, Nvidia
::: chipsets and corruption? Hope not! Cheers.
::
::
:: Well, yes it's the same machine, since one of the suggestions was
:: to replace the PS, I've decided to give that solution a shot.

With the problems you posted and now the fact you're using a five year old
PS, that's exactly what I'd do too.

:: Looking at the specs these days, they seem to have multi-rail +12V
:: support. They range from dual-rail upto quad-rail. Not sure
:: whether to go with more or if two is enough?

Hmmm. Read up on PC Power & Cooling's "Power Supply Myths Exposed." They
seem to indicate multirail designs have at least one major drawback. Maybe
DAYTRIPPER would jump in here???
http://www.pcpower.com/technology/myths/

J.


Not with both feet - too close to a religion discussion for me ;-)

That PC P&C page is certainly as self-serving as possible, but there are
utility tradeoffs in isolation vs flexibility between the two designs for
which the user must account, regardless of any price advantage.

In any case, at the end of the day, proper sizing for the intended
configuration, and user-provided reliability history gleaned from any number
of forums, are much more important than any implementation differences.

/daytripper (That - plus blue leds ;-)
  #6  
Old March 23rd 09, 06:33 PM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
YKhan
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 266
Default Power supplies?

On Mar 23, 9:02*am, "Jack" wrote:
:: Know anything about Zalman PS's?

Never used one personally but friends who have built their own systems and
installed Zalman seem to be happy with them. *They have a good rep here in
Spain.


Well, there is a deal on a refurbed Zalman PS that I've seen.

::: Geez, a PS from five years ago? *Was this the PS involved with
::: your computer that you posted problems with SATA drives, Nvidia
::: chipsets and corruption? Hope not! *Cheers.
::
::
:: Well, yes it's the same machine, since one of the suggestions was
:: to replace the PS, I've decided to give that solution a shot.

With the problems you posted and now the fact you're using a five year old
PS, that's exactly what I'd do too.


I usually never replace my PS unless I get a new one with a new case
or if the PS blows up due to an electrical storm or something. The one
I have currently was relatively high-end for its time, 420W. It's gone
through two processor and two GPU upgrades without any problems. So it
seemed a little random that a simple hard drive addition should push
it over the edge when previous processor and video upgrades didn't
faze it.

:: Looking at the specs these days, they seem to have multi-rail +12V
:: support. They range from dual-rail upto quad-rail. Not sure
:: whether to go with more or if two is enough?

Hmmm. *Read up on PC Power & Cooling's "Power Supply Myths Exposed." *They
seem to indicate multirail designs have at least one major drawback. *Maybe
DAYTRIPPER would jump in here???http://www.pcpower.com/technology/myths/


I'll check it out.

Yousuf Khan
  #7  
Old March 23rd 09, 06:48 PM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
YKhan
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 266
Default Power supplies?

On Mar 23, 1:51*pm, daytripper wrote:
On Mon, 23 Mar 2009 14:02:46 +0100, "Jack" wrote:
Hmmm. *Read up on PC Power & Cooling's "Power Supply Myths Exposed." *They
seem to indicate multirail designs have at least one major drawback. *Maybe
DAYTRIPPER would jump in here???
http://www.pcpower.com/technology/myths/


J.


Not with both feet - too close to a religion discussion for me ;-)

That PC P&C page is certainly as self-serving as possible, but there are
utility tradeoffs in isolation vs flexibility between the two designs for
which the user must account, regardless of any price advantage.


Sure seemed like it. Are these excuses for their products not having
all of the features these days? They're railing against multi-rail
power supplies (pun), but doesn't the current ATX v2.x power supply
specs require you to have at least two rails by default?

In any case, at the end of the day, proper sizing for the intended
configuration, and user-provided reliability history gleaned from any number
of forums, are much more important than any implementation differences.

/daytripper (That - plus blue leds ;-)


All of the big high-end ones seem to have the blue LEDs these days.

Yousuf Khan
  #8  
Old March 23rd 09, 08:24 PM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
daytripper
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 265
Default Power supplies?

On Mon, 23 Mar 2009 11:48:17 -0700 (PDT), YKhan wrote:

On Mar 23, 1:51*pm, daytripper wrote:
On Mon, 23 Mar 2009 14:02:46 +0100, "Jack" wrote:
Hmmm. *Read up on PC Power & Cooling's "Power Supply Myths Exposed." *They
seem to indicate multirail designs have at least one major drawback. *Maybe
DAYTRIPPER would jump in here???
http://www.pcpower.com/technology/myths/


J.


Not with both feet - too close to a religion discussion for me ;-)

That PC P&C page is certainly as self-serving as possible, but there are
utility tradeoffs in isolation vs flexibility between the two designs for
which the user must account, regardless of any price advantage.


Sure seemed like it. Are these excuses for their products not having
all of the features these days? They're railing against multi-rail
power supplies (pun), but doesn't the current ATX v2.x power supply
specs require you to have at least two rails by default?

In any case, at the end of the day, proper sizing for the intended
configuration, and user-provided reliability history gleaned from any number
of forums, are much more important than any implementation differences.

/daytripper (That - plus blue leds ;-)


All of the big high-end ones seem to have the blue LEDs these days.

Yousuf Khan


In spite of some rather mushy "should" statements early in the spec, a strong
case could be made that the whole of ATX12V spec v2.2 absolutely requires more
than one 12V rail - for capacity in excess of 18A. That 18A value is driven by
the *requirement* of meeting UL & CSA safety 240VA regs:

3.2.4. Power Limit / Hazardous Energy Levels
"Under normal or overload conditions, no output shall continuously provide
more than 240 VA under any conditions of load including output short circuit,
per the requirement of UL 1950/CSA 950 / EN 60950/IEC 950."

The requirement to meet UL 1950/CSA 950 / EN 60950/IEC 950 is also provided in
section 3.1.4 "Regulatory".

fwiw, I've been using Rosewill supplies of late, particularly their
RP600V2-S-SL 600W supply - which is a dual-12V rail design. I've built three
well-loaded systems with these in the last couple of years with zero issues
and think they provide good value...

/daytripper
  #9  
Old March 23rd 09, 09:13 PM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
Yousuf Khan
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 914
Default Power supplies?

daytripper wrote:
fwiw, I've been using Rosewill supplies of late, particularly their
RP600V2-S-SL 600W supply - which is a dual-12V rail design. I've built three
well-loaded systems with these in the last couple of years with zero issues
and think they provide good value...



That previous PC P&C "myths" article mentioned that having unused +12V
rails would be a problem, as power supposedly gets trapped in the unused
rails creating efficiency losses. Any truth in this stuff? I can't see
how this might happen myself, a capacitor might get filled, and once
it's filled no more electricity goes into it until it gets utilized.

Yousuf Khan
  #10  
Old March 23rd 09, 09:33 PM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips
daytripper
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 265
Default Power supplies?

On Mon, 23 Mar 2009 17:13:29 -0400, Yousuf Khan wrote:

daytripper wrote:
fwiw, I've been using Rosewill supplies of late, particularly their
RP600V2-S-SL 600W supply - which is a dual-12V rail design. I've built three
well-loaded systems with these in the last couple of years with zero issues
and think they provide good value...



That previous PC P&C "myths" article mentioned that having unused +12V
rails would be a problem, as power supposedly gets trapped in the unused
rails creating efficiency losses. Any truth in this stuff? I can't see
how this might happen myself, a capacitor might get filled, and once
it's filled no more electricity goes into it until it gets utilized.

Yousuf Khan


It's nothing that involved - there's no "trapped" electrons, and there's no
real effect on "efficiency" in any classic sense. That whole spiel simply
points out the effect of "partitioning" 12V capacity into multiple isolated
rails, verses having all 12V capacity on a single rail.

For instance, say you have a single-rail supply with 36A of 12V capacity, and
another supply with 2 12V rails rated at 18A each. Now build a system that
requires 12A of 12V for the motherboard and peripherals, plus a pair of 12A
graphics cards.

Both supplies are rated at 36A of 12V, but hooking up the dual-rail supply is
probably going to be more challenging than the single rail supply. In fact, it
probably could not be done - hence you would have unusable ("trapped")
capacity in the dual-rail supply...

/daytripper
 




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