Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Could you pls share your feelings with us then as to how loud you think the v2.0 PSU is?
^
That's what I thought.
Mine has a rev2.0 sticker on it too.
Now how about an 80+ platinum, passively cooled, modular, 450 watt SFX PSU? Seasonic has ATX versions of this, now all you gotta do is shrink it down a little.
Silverstone comes through for the enthusiasts!
Tony, make sure you send a unit to SilentPCReview.com
Both an older and new revision could be sent so he can evaluate the improvement.
This is fantastic news. I was hoping you guys would announce something soon. Have vendors like Amazon and Newegg replaced their original stock for v2 wholesale? I would hate to order one and end up with the original noisy instead of the v2.
^
That's what I thought.
Mine has a rev2.0 sticker on it too.
Now how about an 80+ platinum, passively cooled, modular, 450 watt SFX PSU? Seasonic has ATX versions of this, now all you gotta do is shrink it down a little.
That is nowhere near a "shrink it down a little" type of job. That particular PSU is already longer than standard ATX (160mm vs. 140mm) so technically it is more than twice as big as a standard SFX PSU! Not saying it will never be done though (we can all dream!), but at least for the foreseeable future, it won't happen. A PSU with some of those attribute could be possible in the next one or two years though.
I don't think many people realize how much of a engineering challenge it is to shrink PSU's physical size by even 10% to 20% within reasonable costs. If it were that easy, we won't be the only brand to have full modular 650W/600W/550W/500W ATX PSUs that are only 140mm long.
Hi guys, this took a while (lots of testing), but we recently updated ST45SF-G with a fan that has a lower ramp up profile and enough air pressure at lower speed to provide sufficient cooling for passing our validation. These are differentiated with a "V2.0" sticker and should be available on the market now worldwide.
Below is a fan speed curve comparison between V1.0 and V2.0. At full loads, the speeds are the same, but at idle loads, the newer ST45SF-G is noticeably quieter thanks to new fan's lower fan speed by more than 300rpm.
*
We have something in the pipeline that I would prefer to send to them rather than ST45SF-G, but maybe I can ask if we can send both?
> 500W 80P Gold + bigger fan?![]()
That's great news! but what about the owners with a 1.0 or a 1.1 unit? Can we RMA through a local distributor or are the early adopters out of luck and have to buy a new one? The fan noise is very annoying since it's the noisiest component of my sff system.
Now how about an 80+ platinum, passively cooled, modular, 450 watt SFX PSU? Seasonic has ATX versions of this, now all you gotta do is shrink it down a little.
We have something in the pipeline that I would prefer to send to them rather than ST45SF-G...
Tony can you provide a little more information? How close to the end of the pipeline? End of month, quarter, or year? Planning some purchases, and I don't want regrets if a modular 550W SFX with 120mm ultra silent fan is near release. By the way what SFX PSU was in your T004 Thunderbolt on display at this year's Computex? Looks a little longer than spec.
You do realise how rediculous you sound.
I was curious on what you were talking about with the T004 PSU so I googled some images. That PSU doesn't look like anything new to me. Looks like V1.1 of the ST45SF-G. I can't seem them needed anything special for an external GPU enclosure. Current SFX supplies would be overkill.
http://www.computershopper.com/var/...olt-graphics-interior-view_slideshow_main.jpg
Still hoping for more information from Tony on what's in the pipeline or at least a time frame.
I'd never buy a passive one specifically, because "passive" usually means "needs another component's fan to not melt".What's ridiculous about that statement? There are a lot of people that would buy a passive version of this power supply, especially if it had higher efficiencies.
What's ridiculous about that statement? There are a lot of people that would buy a passive version of this power supply, especially if it had higher efficiencies.
You want a PSU which is more powerful, higher efficiency, in the same compact size, yet with passive cooling? Not only is this physically impossible, but you come across sounding bratty. Have you seen the size of passive ATX PSUs? They aren't conservative dimension wise.
This is far from "physically impossible". Now it may be too expensive to make a profit, but i know for a fact it can be done. You could probably take their current ST45SF-G, take the fan out and put beefy heatsinks, possibly with heatpipes in its place and put more ventilation in the case and it'd run fine.
Where or whatbis this fact you speak of ?This is far from "physically impossible". Now it may be too expensive to make a profit, but i know for a fact it can be done.
Hell, just leave the 80+ gold, and strap on huge heatpipe heatsinks and I'd buy that. Just something SFX and passive.
> 500W 80P Gold + bigger fan?![]()
Yes, can owners of 1.0 and 1.1 units send in to SilverStone to get a 2.0?
Tony can you provide a little more information? How close to the end of the pipeline? End of month, quarter, or year? Planning some purchases, and I don't want regrets if a modular 550W SFX with 120mm ultra silent fan is near release. By the way what SFX PSU was in your T004 Thunderbolt on display at this year's Computex? Looks a little longer than spec.
Do the v2.0 still have that silly cap on the cable or has it been integrated inside of the unit?
Well yeah, with enough money and time there's very few things that are physically impossible. But unless it becomes economically feasible for mass market the chance you'll ever see one of these being made is very slim. If ITX and small form factors stay popular I would say these will show up sooner rather than later, but I'd be surprised to see a mass-market passive 450 watt sfx in the near future.
...if you're listening Silverstone or Seasonic, please prove me wrong![]()
Considering it took fanless ATX PSUs 8 years to move from 300W (SilverStone's ST30NF in 2004) to the current 520W (Seasonic SS-520FL2 in 2012), don't you guys think we are getting ahead of ourselves here with these expectations out of SFX?
Instead of chasing the impossibles now, we prefer to work on things one step at a time. Fanless SFX is a great idea, but to jump directly to 450W is a too early in our opinion. How about 200W ~ 300W to start? Or even semi-fanless?![]()
Nope, we can't fit bigger fan as there is no room to do that in our SFX PSU. The 120mm/140mm fans we take for granted in modern ATX PSUs are bigger than a SFX PSU in width and length:
140mm fan = 140mm (W) x 140mm (L)
120mm fan = 120mm (W) x 120mm (L)
SFX PSU = 125mm (W) x 100mm (L)
There needs to be at least 10mm (or 20mm with modular connectors) of room for fitting so ATX PSUs that use 140mm fan need to be at least 150mm/160mm deep and while PSUs with 120mm fan need to be 130mm/140mm deep. This leaves maximum fan size for our SFX PSU at 80mm. The next step up in fan size is 92mm, which just misses the requirement by 2mm. The 90mm fans you may have seen advertised elsewhere are all actually 92mm.
There are several SFX PSUs we are developing, but if you are looking for the highest wattage SFX PSUs in the next several months, don't wait. Assuming there are no hiccups during development/production and everything goes smoothly (which almost never happens), we are at least half a year away from anything that could surpass ST45SF-G.
Again, if you see my explanation above, you'll see a 120mm fan in SFX will never happen. That's almost like asking car companies to fit three-row seatings in a subcompact car.
Nope, we can't fit bigger fan as there is no room to do that in our SFX PSU. The 120mm/140mm fans we take for granted in modern ATX PSUs are bigger than a SFX PSU in width and length:
140mm fan = 140mm (W) x 140mm (L)
120mm fan = 120mm (W) x 120mm (L)
SFX PSU = 125mm (W) x 100mm (L)
Instead of chasing the impossibles now, we prefer to work on things one step at a time. Fanless SFX is a great idea, but to jump directly to 450W is a too early in our opinion. How about 200W ~ 300W to start? Or even semi-fanless?![]()
How about 200W ~ 300W to start? Or even semi-fanless?![]()
There needs to be at least 10mm (or 20mm with modular connectors) of room for fitting so ATX PSUs that use 140mm fan need to be at least 150mm/160mm deep and while PSUs with 120mm fan need to be 130mm/140mm deep. This leaves maximum fan size for our SFX PSU at 80mm. The next step up in fan size is 92mm, which just misses the requirement by 2mm. The 90mm fans you may have seen advertised elsewhere are all actually 92mm.
Instead of chasing the impossibles now, we prefer to work on things one step at a time. Fanless SFX is a great idea, but to jump directly to 450W is a too early in our opinion. How about 200W ~ 300W to start? Or even semi-fanless?![]()
He is clearly talking about a standard sized SFX psu as dictated by the current standards not a different form factor such as E-SFX. If you want an E-SFX at the moment go with High Power.
Personally I would like to see a modular E-SFX that is 125x125x63.5mm with a 92mm fan but that isn't going to happen overnight.
The ST65F-G is a very different psu and a much larger form factor overall. It appears that SS are already struggling to fit all the details into the SFX form factor and that is why the connections protrude outside of the case.
You asked him about what they are developing, he replied and then you wonder why he said anything? It takes allot of R&D time to get something like this to market, why are you puzzled he said anything? I am glad to hear they are working on it even if they said it is a year away. At least we know they are planning stuff and moving forward. He also never suggested it didn't exist. First prototypes can be easily a year before they are finished.
We have something in the pipeline that I would prefer to send to them rather than ST45SF-G, but maybe I can ask if we can send both?
non of those cars are even close to subcompact cars and is like comparing the ATX form factor to SFX again.