EVGA SuperNOVA 1000 G3 PSU Review

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powernod

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Sep 6, 2015
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140$. Exactly the same cost with Corsair's RMx1000 current pricing. Not sure which unit i would choose between those 2.
 

BugariaM

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Jan 3, 2017
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Nice.

>>>The 1000 G3's single bulk cap is provided by Chemi-Con (400V, 820uF, 2000h @ 105°C, CE)

Strangely, but I did not find "CE" series of capacitors in the Nippon Chemi-Con catalog
 
Wow. The price point of this and overall performance makes this a serious player even for those who were in the market for nothing more than 850W gold or even platinum PSUs. So many people out there say "you don't need more than a xxxW power supply for your build." I like to buy based on <60% of calculated max load use of my build for less fan noise, heat output, and higher efficiency wall draw.

Buying a gold 600W PSU when my rig uses 500W for example does not make much sense to me. I'd prefer to spend a little more and buy a gold 850W ($110USD vs. $130USD in the example of these two 650 & 850 G3 series on NewEgg [US] right now). Not only for a higher efficiency operation as described above, but for future headroom growth. But I understand many do not think that and look to save a few dollars everywhere...one being on the PSU.
 


Keep in mind when comparing the RM1000x that it was introduced at $180 in November 2015 and it took nearly a year to see the prices drop down below $150. The EVGA was originally released at $170 and has only been out for four months. Also keep in mind that the Corsair is marketed more for silent operation (drawback to that shown below).

If none of the drawbacks described and shown here do not bother you, and if overall "hot" efficiency and exhaust temperature are among top priorities for you, then the EVGA is the better performer. Average efficiency result of 7 load line tests, and the average exhaust temps under each test:

EVGA - 88.571%, 45.0C
Corsair - 87.857%, 49.8C

^^While the <1% efficiency difference is nominal and will not be seen on your monthly power bill, that nearly 5C difference coming out can make a slight difference in the temperature of your room in the summer. So the Corsair being quieter has a drawback.

http://www.jonnyguru.com/modules.php?name=NDReviews&op=Story4&reid=494 (EVGA)
http://www.jonnyguru.com/modules.php?name=NDReviews&op=Story4&reid=449 (Corsair)
 

Co BIY

Splendid
I would have liked to see the EVGA 1000 G2 in the performance tables as well. Both to see the generational improvement and to make a value comparison while both units are on the market.

Is EVGA stopping production of the G2 series ?
 

hst101rox

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Aug 28, 2014
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10TACLE, if the efficiency of the EVGA and the Corsair are nearly identical, the ~5 degree C temp difference could be just from the amount of airflow being less in the Corsair. Power consumption is the only thing that equates to BTUs, heat.
 


That's why I stated the downside to the Corsair is the hotter air coming out the back. Same thing with a video card: you have to sacrifice more heat output for a quieter fan speed.

 

Co BIY

Splendid
"We didn't get any OCP results because our unit died during the OPP test, meaning either that this particular sample had a problem or OPP is set very high."

Seems like this would be a big deal ?

Maybe at least one bullet in the Con column.
 

TJ Hooker

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His point is that without considering air flow rate, exhaust temp does not tell you much heat it's putting out. If you want to know how much heat the PSU is dumping into the room, divide system power draw by efficiency. Even if you're running those PSUs at 1000 W (and we assume for the moment that the average efficiency you calculated applies with a 1000W load), you'd only be looking at 9 W difference in heat output, which is pretty trivial. That's not going to make a difference to the temperature of your room.

Regarding your video card example: slower fan speed results in a hotter GPU, but it doesn't change the amount of heat output.
 

I see this logic around a bit and I have to respectfully disagree. The problem with making an efficiency argument based on max load of the system is that unless you have a relatively unusual workload (like bitcoin mining with 3 GPUs, for example) your system very rarely actually hits those peak levels of power draw. Very few rendering/productivity tasks fully load up a GPU, and gaming workloads don't fully light up the CPU - and when they do you're probably bottlenecking the GPU anyway.

Let's say a hypothetical build hits 500W when you fire up Intel burn test and furmark simultaneously while running a low-level disk check on all your HDDs, It's likely that same build sits at a much lower 300-350W in most normal gaming workloads. Obviously you want to be sure you can handle those peak workloads so a 550W (or, for some extra headroom) a 600W PSU is mandatory. But you should IMHO make your efficiency decision based on the most common load scenario the system will be sitting at. And 300-350W is right in the efficiency sweet spot for a 600W PSU.

Obviously you don't want to skimp on your PSU, there's no question about that, but I feel like I see many inexperienced builders on the forums here getting talked into spending big dollars on premium 650 & 750W units for their single GPU builds "just to be on the safe-side" when something like a CX450M for ~$50 would suit them perfectly.
 

MisterLeeD

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Apr 7, 2017
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"We didn't get any OCP results because our unit died during the OPP test, meaning either that this particular sample had a problem or OPP is set very high."
In normal operations is this of major concern??
 
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