PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Quad CF-Edition
by Christoph Katzer on July 18, 2007 1:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Cases/Cooling/PSUs
Cables and Connectors
PCP&C didn't forget anything when it comes to cables and connectors. There are enough connectors on cables of varying lengths to provide the best connectivity possible. The 4-pin drive connectors start at 35cm/14". With a length of 40cm/16" the main 24-pin ATX connector may prove a bit short for some cases but it's still acceptable - if your mainboard is mounted upside-down, though, you will likely encounter problems. All cables are sleeved until the first connector. In order to improve the appearance, the sleeves start inside the power supply. With a maximum length of 90cm/35" the cables are long enough to support even big-towers.
With 750W this PSU is definitely designed for multiple graphics cards. The Silencer 750 Quad is packed with four 6-pin PEG connectors, two of which can be converted into 8-pin PEG connectors. This definitely satisfies the requirements of current high-end graphics configurations, which makes sense as it pretty much requires multiple high-end GPUs to push your typical PC power requirements to anything near 750W.
PCP&C didn't forget anything when it comes to cables and connectors. There are enough connectors on cables of varying lengths to provide the best connectivity possible. The 4-pin drive connectors start at 35cm/14". With a length of 40cm/16" the main 24-pin ATX connector may prove a bit short for some cases but it's still acceptable - if your mainboard is mounted upside-down, though, you will likely encounter problems. All cables are sleeved until the first connector. In order to improve the appearance, the sleeves start inside the power supply. With a maximum length of 90cm/35" the cables are long enough to support even big-towers.
With 750W this PSU is definitely designed for multiple graphics cards. The Silencer 750 Quad is packed with four 6-pin PEG connectors, two of which can be converted into 8-pin PEG connectors. This definitely satisfies the requirements of current high-end graphics configurations, which makes sense as it pretty much requires multiple high-end GPUs to push your typical PC power requirements to anything near 750W.
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Christoph Katzer - Wednesday, July 18, 2007 - link
Thanks, was of course wrong. I changed it now.