can my psu handle my system specs

metahard

Honorable
Feb 17, 2015
23
0
10,510
well here's my specs

cpu amd a4 3300 2.50 ghz dual core
gpu radeon r7 260x 2 gb
ram 2gb+4gb =6 gb ddr3 ram
psu thermaltake litepower 450 watts (with 1x 6pin connector)

is my psu enogh .i dont want to overlcok my gpu or cpu.well gigabyte r7 260x version 2.0 recommends 450 watts psu
and thanks to all .
 
Solution
Putting aside who makes the specific unit, the PSU only has 324W on the +12V rails.

Assuming that you'll be gaming, your CPU is likely going to be at 100% usage, meaning that it will be pulling the full 65W. At 1920x1080 resolution with some advanced graphical settings, your GPU is probably pulling around 95W. Throw in a few disks, fans, etc. and your gaming TDP is probably around 215W, which puts your PSU at 66% load.

Yes, your PSU should be fine, but I would still look to upgrade it sooner rather than later.
Depends on the exact model Thermaltake has several 450w lite power models from 3 different manufactures. The units from CWT and solytech are horrible units with a weak 12v rail. The unit made by FSP isn't bad but its rare, most of the 450w lite powers are the CWT and solytech units.
 
Putting aside who makes the specific unit, the PSU only has 324W on the +12V rails.

Assuming that you'll be gaming, your CPU is likely going to be at 100% usage, meaning that it will be pulling the full 65W. At 1920x1080 resolution with some advanced graphical settings, your GPU is probably pulling around 95W. Throw in a few disks, fans, etc. and your gaming TDP is probably around 215W, which puts your PSU at 66% load.

Yes, your PSU should be fine, but I would still look to upgrade it sooner rather than later.
 
Solution