Corsair Vs450 PSU vs APC Stepped Sine-Wave UPS



I agree with that.

I bought this APC Back-UPS, hardly 3 months old, it is stepped sine wave. Cheapest pure sine-wave is damn expensive and can't really buy new one again.

Problem is all good quality PSU, which have 12V rails with 35-40 Amp, are also PFC. Local cheap PSUs in India, all are non-PFC but their 12V rails carry 19 Amp in total. That is not recommended here:

http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/314712-28-please-read-determine-power-required

So I dont know what to do now
 
hmmmm....I would rather buy another UPS with pure sinewave and use the already bought UPS for something else.
Yes, all or vast majority of good PSUs are all equipped with PFC.
Getting cheaper no-name PSU, something that can accept stepped wave form..I would not call this as a solution.
 


Here is something interesting I came across. I ran my current rig in outversion power supply calculator and I got these values minimum requirements (I assume it calculates them for full load):

+12V = 15.4 A
+5 V = 10.3 A
+3.3 V = 8.1 A


All those local non-PFC PSUs have:

+12V = 19 A
+5 V = 45 A
+3.3 V = 28 A

Now I understood why, generally, everyone of my colleagues and friends can run local PSUs without any issues, it is because no one has that big power requirements and local PSUs satisfy whatever is needed.
 
PSU max load capacity does not reflect the real power consumption.
You need to more or less calculate the real consumption to choose a UPS.

Problem between PFC (power factor correction) and Stepped Sinewave output UPS has nothing to do directly with the max capacity. The problem is due to how the PFC works.

Do not mix things up :)
 
I am not mixing anything.

I thought outversion power supply calculator exists to tell you what kind of wattage of PSU and wattage and amperage requirements on each rail of PSU you need. It is independent of PFC or non-PFC. It is just the power requirement of your desktop computer.
 

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