Question Help find Cybenetics report for be quiet! Straight Power 12

Feb 11, 2024
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Can't find it. Does it exist? If so please share! Thank you!

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See the botton line?
Efficiency With 10W or 2% Load = 68.664%
 
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Just found it very strange that a PSU with 80 PLUS Titanium/Platinum certification has only 68% efficency under 2% load.
Considering that many times pc users just browse the web like right now, the browser is opened and a forum is being viewed, this is a low load situation. So the efficency in this case would be BELOW 80%, hmm.
 
If you didn't find it there then it does not exist there. Contact them directly and ask.
The thing is the labels for be quiet PSUs, i mean the naming scheme seems to be different from the names presented on bequiets official website. So the PSU might be in the list but with a different name, for me its very difficult figuring this out. I thought someone here in this literal hardware forum might have a clue.
 
Just found it very strange that a PSU with 80 PLUS Titanium/Platinum certification has only 68% efficency under 2% load.
Considering that many times pc users just browse the web like right now, the browser is opened and a forum is being viewed, this is a low load situation. So the efficency in this case would be BELOW 80%, hmm.
This is where it behooves you to learn how power supplies work. Efficiency is at its lowest when unloaded or very lightly loaded and goes up with increasing load.
 
This is where it behooves you to learn how power supplies work. Efficiency is at its lowest when unloaded or very lightly loaded and goes up with increasing load.
Why does PSU efficiency increase when load increases and decrease when load decreases?
Is it difficult for PSU manufacturers to create PSUs with good efficiency combined with low load or is this an outcome of lazyness?
 
Time for plumbing analogies:

Imagine I made a water pump designed to push 100L per second, and only asked it to do 2L per second. Would it use more or less power than a pump designed to push 10L per second doing the same job?
 
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Time for plumbing analogies:

Imagine I made a water pump designed to push 100L per second, and only asked it to do 2L per second. Would it use more or less power than a pump designed to push 10L per second doing the same job?
I see where you're going. Nice one.