http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16817159035
CoolMax 400W PSU for $26.99 Not to shabby.
CoolMax 400W PSU for $26.99 Not to shabby.
Originally posted by: richardycc
dont you need to buy the case to get this price?
Originally posted by: aceO07
I haven't bought any new hardward for a while so I'm out of it. If the PSU has a top fan, does that mean the case also needs an opening for the air to get out through the top?
Originally posted by: berkut7
I got the deal from newegg. I'm not aware that you need to buy something else to get the 30 instant rebate. They let me have it for $26.99 + 6.99 shipping. But here's the interesting part: apparently the power supply inside the box is: CL-550L( +12V 35A!). There appears there's been some mistake, but I'm not complaining. One possibily that the PSU has a wrong label attached, but it's more likely I got a 550W PSU istead of 400W. I can add a photo, if I get some time.
Originally posted by: mindless1
Pretty sure these are not made by SPI/Sparkle/etc, might be Channel Well relabels. Not necessarily a great deal $27, that's about right, a reasonable value for a lower end system. 12V rail insufficient for a higher end system and 5V rail appears overrated. If 12V is similarly overrated, expect problems.
Newegg price now appears to be $57-20+7 S/H= $44. Deal hunters can do better for $44
Originally posted by: X-Man
Originally posted by: mindless1
Pretty sure these are not made by SPI/Sparkle/etc, might be Channel Well relabels. Not necessarily a great deal $27, that's about right, a reasonable value for a lower end system. 12V rail insufficient for a higher end system and 5V rail appears overrated. If 12V is similarly overrated, expect problems.
Newegg price now appears to be $57-20+7 S/H= $44. Deal hunters can do better for $44
Seems to work nicely enough in my A64 @ 2.25 GHz. It has higher amp ratings than the Enermax that it replaced.
Originally posted by: mindless1
Originally posted by: X-Man
Originally posted by: mindless1
Pretty sure these are not made by SPI/Sparkle/etc, might be Channel Well relabels. Not necessarily a great deal $27, that's about right, a reasonable value for a lower end system. 12V rail insufficient for a higher end system and 5V rail appears overrated. If 12V is similarly overrated, expect problems.
Newegg price now appears to be $57-20+7 S/H= $44. Deal hunters can do better for $44
Seems to work nicely enough in my A64 @ 2.25 GHz. It has higher amp ratings than the Enermax that it replaced.
Therein lies the problem, the false amperage ratings. In this day and age, WHY do people keep mentioning what is printed on the label of an off-brand PSU???
Then again, Enermax in particular is also falsely rated, must be derated to 70% per the label. Point being, this is another one of those take-a-generic-made-pretty-and-rate-for-peak-instead-of-sustained-output, power supplies. Not that this should be surprising though, rather that the true price/capacity doesn't change, you'll just see inflated prices on some of the beautified generics.
With exception of the 12cm fan, these aren't much better than the typical pseudo-500W $25 PSU. That doesn't mean it won't run system "X" if system X's actual power needs are below the psu's actual power capability, BUT that also does not mean it will run long term in any particular config, nor what will happen if it POPs. That makes it a fair deal at $27, maybe, but not $44.
General rule of thumb, the lowest price obtainable for a PSU should be around 10% of the total system cost. Wattage rating on a label is pretty irrelevant when shopping the low-end power supply market.
Originally posted by: X-ManSeems to me that you're jumping to conclusions. Do you have any proof to offer that would conclude that listed ratings are incorrect?
Originally posted by: SamusDon't believe the hype. Nobody needs 500-600 watt PSU's. Most of them are crap anyway. This 400-watt, if built with quality components, is probably capable of running a great system with a high end 7800GT or something of the like. My hard disks alone kill about 40 watts of power, most people only have 1 drive.
My experience has been that the cheaper brand PSUs add up the max loads of every rail and call that the rating for the whole unit. The 'name brand' units pull back from this number by 20-30% to a number that the PSU could reasonably sustain on a 'typical' machine.Seems to me that you're jumping to conclusions. Do you have any proof to offer that would conclude that listed ratings are incorrect?