Power Supply Calculator

Enclosures, modding, blowholes, and the power needed to run it all.

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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Tue Jun 10, 2008 12:15 pm

The second link (eXtreme calculator) is very updated. My system is 263W at 100% TDP for CPU and 100% system load. I guess I don't need a 500W Antec after all.
My gaming rig: i5-750, Gigabyte GA-H55M-UD2H, Kingston DDR3-1333 8GB, PowerColor HD5770, WD Caviar Black 640GB, Samsung 2253GW, Windows 7 Home Premium x64 SP1
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Thu Jun 19, 2008 7:53 am

I have a 400W it's good ?
Last edited by Kevin on Fri Jun 20, 2008 8:48 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: EDIT BY MOD: Removed spam image link.
CobrA4cS
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Thu Jun 19, 2008 9:05 am

If it's relatively recent and of a name brand, then you'll get stable 400W. If it's a whitebox, then when you load it up above 50% (ballpark), it's going do either or both of:

- Not give you 400W and crash and burn.
- Not give you a stable 12V and you'll get lots of system instabilities.

Nevertheless, if it's working, it's working.
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Sat Jun 28, 2008 9:17 pm

I wanted to post a more recent psu calc link....one that has at least most of the pc parts that you buy today. (June, 2008)

http://www.extreme.outervision.com/psuc ... orlite.jsp

Another one, is quite stringent on their requirements. It's from the Asus Site:

http://support.asus.com.tw/PowerSupplyC ... uage=en-us

Gary
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Wed Aug 06, 2008 8:57 pm

I'm just a newbie and tends to focus more on the +12V rail(s) where I understand somewhat that most of the power draw is on +12V. I believe it is +12V1 for graphics card, fans and motor drives and +12V2 for processor VRM. I also think the power draw of the rest of the circuits/devices on the lower voltage rails of most typical set ups would never add up to 100 watts (unlike in the olden days where they were more stressed). I also like referring to TR's power consumption test figures because they are obtained on the wall socket w/ hi-tech professional equipment.

Am I doing things right or I would be better off relying on PSU calculators?
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Sat Dec 06, 2008 9:38 am

This is the psu calculator that I use.
I'm only using 334 watts (though I have a coolmax CUG-950).

http://www.extreme.outervision.com/psucalculatorlite.jsp
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Re: PSU calculator

Postposted on Tue Apr 07, 2009 3:58 pm

spiritwalker2222 wrote:Check out this calculator too, you can include your OC info.

http://www.extreme.outervision.com/index.jsp


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I try the link above you posted, but is it correct to say that the result is right to say the lease?
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Tue Nov 03, 2009 6:06 pm

I'll have to give this a look... Bare in mind that if these scores are accurate and you score say... 410, you wouldn't' want to use a 420W PSU. The closer and closer you get a system to its PSU's max load the better chance you have of frying something. Also when ran that close to its maximum its going to put off a lot of heat raising your systems temperature. I always shoot for at least 20% headroom, and if you plan to expand the system (More hdds or maybe even a new video card 30-40%!! :), I also shoot for supplies that have 80%+ efficiency, cool little guesstimating site though :)

karz - I would rely on the TR stuff first off, they provide real-world testing on devices in person. The draw from the wall is not what your system is actually using either, this depends on the efficiency of the PSU your using, im sure TR includes this in their reviews and guides when talking about PS units.. they are quite thorough. As for the 12v Rails....... On many top end modular supplies they will have each plug port listed for which 12v rail it runs off of. In addition a few of them will be listed as having 3 or 4 12v rails and 1 of them will be reserved for the CPU plugs, and the others for whatever you plug it into. Hope this helps!
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Sun Jan 16, 2011 8:34 am

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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Mon Feb 07, 2011 4:27 am

I'm at 557w with a 650 Antec Triopower unit.
Should I start worrying?
I mean, the cooler of the powersupply does kick in rather loud when I play something like Crysis.
(Apart from the 480GTX, but that fan whines at a higher pitch...)
I7-3770@4ghz, Asus P8H77-M, NVIDIA 680 GTX, 16 gig DDR3-800 Kingston, 1x Corsair Force 3 128gb SSD, 2x 2 tera 7200rpm SATA WD Black, Lite-on Blu-ray 16x DVD+-RW, X-fi Titanium HD, Corsair 550D Obsidian.
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Wed Apr 20, 2011 2:07 pm

You know what, I replaced that PSU with a Corsair HX-850 and the noise in considerably lower. Should have done this months ago.
I7-3770@4ghz, Asus P8H77-M, NVIDIA 680 GTX, 16 gig DDR3-800 Kingston, 1x Corsair Force 3 128gb SSD, 2x 2 tera 7200rpm SATA WD Black, Lite-on Blu-ray 16x DVD+-RW, X-fi Titanium HD, Corsair 550D Obsidian.
Asus UX31E with i5 and 256gb SSD.
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Wed Apr 20, 2011 4:09 pm

Finally somewhat believable calculator. I knew that 350Wish is more than most people need, and those 600W recommendations were insane.
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Re: Power Supply Calculator

Postposted on Mon Aug 29, 2011 1:05 am

I calculated mine as roughly 430watt under full load. Core i5 2500K + Radeon HD 6950, P67 mobo, 1TB HD, 2*RAM and optical drive.

150watt for d CPU
225watt for d GPU
15watt for d mobo
plus 30watt for some other small things

but yeah, I was just estimating for OC sake.

My PSU is a Xigmatek NRP-PC502 500watt 85% efficiency under 94% load.
Core i5-2500K|MSI P67A-GD55|8GB DDR3-1333|Sapphire R6950 2GB|1TB WD SATA3|CoolerMaster V6 GT|Logitech Z103|Logitech K200|SAMSUNG SyncMaster SA350|Xigmatek NRP-PC502|
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