• Some users have recently had their accounts hijacked. It seems that the now defunct EVGA forums might have compromised your password there and seems many are using the same PW here. We would suggest you UPDATE YOUR PASSWORD and TURN ON 2FA for your account here to further secure it. None of the compromised accounts had 2FA turned on.
    Once you have enabled 2FA, your account will be updated soon to show a badge, letting other members know that you use 2FA to protect your account. This should be beneficial for everyone that uses FSFT.

New PSU Necessary?

devman

2[H]4U
Joined
Dec 3, 2005
Messages
2,400
Things that draw power:
AMD FX-60 (Toledo)
eVGA nForce4 SLI Edition Mainboard
eVGA e-Geforce 7800GT 256MB GDDR3 PCI-E
3072MB Corsair PC3200 (Using 4 sticks)
Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD2500KS 250GB w/16mb
TV tuner PCI card.
Two Optical drives
120mm case fan.

PSU: Antec SP-450

I'm thinking of upgrading to an 8800GTS 320 and adding a Raptor HDD as well as some additional cooling (probably a few extra case fans). My question is will my SP-450 be up to the task, or should I consider upgrading. After reading the glowing reviews about Corsair's 520W PSU I'm thinking thats a likely selection, but being rated at only 520Ws I see other 500W PSUs for about half the price, is the Corsair really worth that much more?

I would like something that is reliable and have enough headroom to last through some more upgrades or new system. I have no plans on ever going SLI (I love my dual monitors to much) so it will likely always be powering a single card.

Suggestions appreciated.
 
I'd upgrade the psu. The reason the Corsair is so expensive for a 500w unit, is because it's not like the others; assuming you're talking about a decent 500w unit, certain models (silverstone ST-50EF, xclio goodpower 500, etc), have much less amperage; the corsair has 40a on the +12v rail. comparison: OCZ Powerstream 620: 33a combined. OCZ evostream 600w: 40a. And of course, generic units which don't do what they're told to.

go nuts with the corsair.
 
Also, many PSU companies rate their stuff @ 25c, whereas the Corsairs are @ 50c, if I'm not mistaken. Bottom line, the average consumer will actually be able to get the rated power from their PSU (without breaking a sweat) as opposed to the igloo-rated lesser competition.
 
Sorry if this is a kind of noob question, but will the Corsair 520 be able to fit in the same place my Antec SP-450 currently is?
 
Yes, no problem. All atx psu's are exactly the same size in terms of width and height, with the same screw locations; it's the length that vary's from psu to psu. most are 5.5", there are some that are longer (usually high-powered units, like the PCP&C Turbocool 1kw, or silverstone zeus 850, etc)
 
Back
Top