PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Quad CF-Edition
by Christoph Katzer on July 18, 2007 1:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Cases/Cooling/PSUs
12V Results
To push the power supply to the limit we had to pull almost 600W out of the 12V rail which is impossible to achieve with only one cable/connector attached. The single cable would have most likely melted if we had done so. In order to avoid destroying the cables we used various kinds of connectors such as ATX, 4-pin Molex, and several 6-pin PEG connectors.
12V at room temperature
At all temperatures the 12V rail held stable over an optimal range. With increasing heat and load it went only 0.2V under 12V which will not cause any problems whatsoever. The 12V rail(s) is often the most critical aspect of a power supply, so it's good to see better results here than what we saw with the lower voltage rails.
12V Test Results | |||
Percentage | Ampere | Wattage | Wattage (All Rails) |
10% | 5.03 | 60.86 | 75.61 |
20% | 12.05 | 121.3 | 150.82 |
30% | 15.08 | 181.56 | 225.52 |
40% | 20.11 | 241.52 | 299.69 |
50% | 25.13 | 301.06 | 373.43 |
60% | 30.16 | 360.41 | 446.52 |
70% | 35.19 | 419.47 | 519.14 |
80% | 40.21 | 477.7 | 591.04 |
90% | 45.24 | 535.64 | 662.41 |
100% | 50.26 | 592.57 | 732.52 |
To push the power supply to the limit we had to pull almost 600W out of the 12V rail which is impossible to achieve with only one cable/connector attached. The single cable would have most likely melted if we had done so. In order to avoid destroying the cables we used various kinds of connectors such as ATX, 4-pin Molex, and several 6-pin PEG connectors.
12V at room temperature
At all temperatures the 12V rail held stable over an optimal range. With increasing heat and load it went only 0.2V under 12V which will not cause any problems whatsoever. The 12V rail(s) is often the most critical aspect of a power supply, so it's good to see better results here than what we saw with the lower voltage rails.
31 Comments
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rick5127 - Friday, February 12, 2010 - link
Thanks for the nice review.I am an enthusiast as I always push the envelope. A few years back I was running an ASUS PC-DL (dual socket 604 system) and started having flaky problems. After much testing we finally found it was a PSU problem. As I was running several of these machine 24/7 at 100% load (Folding at home project) I started eating power supplies. After much research we, several of us worked together on this, finally settled on a minimum spec of 30a for the 12v rail. This was about the time the dual rails started coming out. Well after burning up several of these I finally changed to PC-Power and cooling supplies and haven't had a problem in 10 years or so.
I get a kick out of some that say this 750 supply is too much. Well one of my systems that is running here has dual socket 775 quad cores with dual Geforce 9800 GTX+'s in it. Needless to say the 750 is close to maxed out.
In any case PC-Power and Cooling builds some of the best PSU's in the world and I wouldn't trust my systems to anything else.
I noticed the price here was listed at $199 I think... well NewEgg has a recertified 750 for $89 at the moment. FYI
Martimus - Thursday, July 19, 2007 - link
What is the difference between this PSU and the copper 750 Quad Silencer? Other than the fact his one is $30 more, the specs look the same between the two. Can you tell me what differences they have?meeshu - Thursday, July 19, 2007 - link
Once again no ripple results!Vidmar - Wednesday, July 18, 2007 - link
While I think the Efficiency charts in load percentage are nice, if you included Efficiency charts in watts it would be more informative from a buying perspective.The reason? I know the sum of system load is 375watts normally. The way it is now, if power supply XYZ has a max load of 650watts, I have to calculate where my ~375watts falls into that load chart (~57% load). But if the next power supply has 1000 watts max, then I have to yet again calculate what load percentage that may be for *that* power supply. If the Efficiency charts were in watts, instead of load, no calculations would be necessary. If I could look at your charts and see that XYZ power supply provided those watts the most efficiently, that would be the power supply I would get.
Maybe you could just provide a second X axis on the chart that included the watts.
Thanks!
bob4432 - Wednesday, July 18, 2007 - link
why is it rated @ 60A output on the 12V rail yet only delivered ~50A? so is 60A peak and not a ems amount? you got ~600W on the 12V, not ~720W like the math dictates.i know it is 10A (120W, quite a bit of difference imho) but does that mean that other psus that are rated @ 30A on the 12V line only put out 20A? or a 20A that only puts out 15A?
seems a bit misleading if they are mixing peak and ems amounts....
Martimus - Friday, July 20, 2007 - link
It is a DC output. There is no "EMS".bob4432 - Friday, July 20, 2007 - link
maybe i am thinking rms....hahabob4432 - Friday, July 20, 2007 - link
ok, so why is it still 10A lower than what it is listed as?Belldandy - Wednesday, July 18, 2007 - link
What was the ambient temperature when the efficiency tests were performed? I'm assuming the efficiency will go up when the ambient temperature is lower as it leads to lower temperature of the components.Also is the unit unable to hit 750 Watts? It states that the peak wattage is 825, and there's plenty of room for more current to be drawn from the 12V lines if it can indeed provide 60A current. Can it actually provide 825W of inrush current to power up large disk arrays?
Given the premium nature of this power supply, I wouldn't be surprised if it found it's way into video editing workstations with 2 Quad core cpus and a disk array of say 24 SATA drives.
Christoph Katzer - Wednesday, July 18, 2007 - link
The graphs show the efficiency at higher temps (25-50). You can see the exact temp on page 14.I will add the inrush and peak wattage test in the methodology.