Cables and Connectors


With the power supply of this caliber, the cables of course come with sleeving. The maximum cable length is 80cm (32"), which is long enough for most cases. However, the minimum length of 50cm (20") on the ATX connectors is only average and may not work well in full-tower cases -- particularly cases where the PSU is on the bottom. Such cases usually require cable lengths of at least 60cm if you want to route the cables nicely and keep from impeding airflow.


Most of the cables are detachable and come in an extra bag Seasonic provides. The 24-pin ATX connector, 4-pin ATX12V and 8-pin EPS12V connectors, two 60cm 6-pin PEG connectors, and SATA harness are all affixed to the power supply; all of the remaining cables are optional. The power supply provides a total of four PEG connectors, which is decent for an 850W power supply, but it's certainly possible to power higher end configurations (i.e. triple SLI -- even if NVIDIA refuses to certify "smaller" PSUs for such use).

The Fan


Sanyo Denki, a renowned Japanese fan maker, produces the 120mm San Ace fan installed in this power supply. The model number is 9S1212H403.

Packaging and Appearance Internals
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  • sprockkets - Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - link

    Very bad waveform with very high frequency components? The "waveform" exists since it cannot perfectly make a flat line voltage.

    Besides, the ATX12V 2.3 spec allows 120 mV ripple for all 12V lines and 50 mV ripple for the 3.3 and 5V lines. It is very well within spec, and consider that these ripple specs are stricter than previous versions of the ATX12V spec, you are going to be fine.
  • valdir - Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - link

    Waveform exists since we are looking and measuring it... and there are good and bad ripple and noise waveforms on the DC rails, just compare with Antec Signature or Corsair 750W or Enermax Revolution or... definitively a very bad waveform.
    These waveforms are more like very high frequency noise covering ripple and this is not good, since on the PSU's DC rails we should see ripple and not the same noise level.
  • mindless1 - Saturday, November 29, 2008 - link

    Actually it won't make a bit of difference in use. The day a little bit of ripple or it's frequency matters, will be the day we all start using linear PSU again.
  • fri2219 - Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - link

    Why does Seasonic insist on putting crappy ADDA fans in 150.00+ units? For the same price, they could at least source from Panasonic or Yate Loon.

    That ticking sound in the "heavily undervoltaged fan" (nice heavily murderaged of the englished language, there) is incredibly annoying for those of us who haven't destroyed our hearing by playing our iPods at 90db every day for the last 5 years.
  • mindless1 - Saturday, November 29, 2008 - link

    WTF? Yate Loon is the bottom of the barrel, ADDA is mid quality. If you want a yate loon on your case wall it's not so bad but those fail pretty frequently when placed horizontally in a PSU.
  • sprockkets - Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - link

    Perhaps you can re-read page 1 where it says it uses a Sanyo Denki fan.

    And, what is "murderaged" spelling hypocrite?
  • Slash3 - Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - link

    Wooshed.
  • JarredWalton - Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - link

    FWIW, that was another error with the speech-recognition. Dragon NaturallySpeaking does so well that sometimes I miss errors in dictation. Apparently, it thinks "undervoltage" is an allowable word, but I know I said "undervolted". Whatever.

    In case you're wondering, Christoph is not a native English speaker, but he is fluent in at least English, French, and Chinese -- besides his native tongue of German. Feel free to critique his use of a second tongue; me, I'm happy to speak English, Danish, and some German. Anyway, I do pretty heavy editing of his text to clean up the English, but errors slip through on occasion. I was pressed for time on this one (had to run off to the airport) so I didn't give the final text a second proofread.
  • RallyMaster - Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - link

    "That's not entirely wrong, as PSUs are one of the components most people only think about when their old unit sales, or when building a new system."

    What does "old unit sales" even mean? Are you sure you're not saying "old unit fails?"
  • Spoelie - Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - link

    Page 1

    "The PSUs are also supposed to have very tight voltage regulation in the future only Japanese manufactured capacitors."

    I'm not quite sure what to make of that sentence.

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