I actually have two choices right now. I will completely listen your opinion and do things in that way.
Right now I am using a Thermaltake Smart 650W PSU since 2017. I thought that is a good PSU until people in here says that it is not. I was not even going to get a quality one until I get a new 8-10 cores CPU with a new motherboard and cooler.
Today I bought an Arctic Freezer 34 eSports DUO air cooler, people said that getting this one will be a better option than a 120mm water cooler. I hope I did not make a mistake. I would also like to hear your opinions about that too. Right now I am using Thermaltake Water 3.0 water cooling 120mm since 2017.
I also bought that High Power PSU anyway before its price went from 50 dollars to 70 dollars. No worries, I just did not want to lose that discount if there was a misunderstanding about that PSU. As I said before, I have 2 choices:
1- I will stick to my Thermaltake Smart 650W PSU for now.
2- I will start to use that High Power 700W PSU.
Right now I can not afford a quality PSU, I got some capital goods and I don't want to spend that money on a new quality component. Please let me know what should I do. Should I stick to Smart 650W like I already do or should I open and use that High Power PSU? They write its very efficient and they used quality Taiwan capacitors. I mean who would say that they use bad components on their products. They could not even get an efficient certificate. In my country, all the people are suggesting High Power PSUs to each other and I've never seen a bad comment for that brand or the specific model. That's why I wanted to get that but people in this forum has a better knowledge I believe so wanted to ask it in here too. I bought it anyway but only for not losing the discount. I can refund it without issue.
While the Thermaltake isn't very good, since the High Power isn't, either, so it makes sense to just continue using it rather than getting a second mediocre power supply. We keep a curated power supply list stickied in the Power Supplies forum and while everyone's going to disagree with something, it does a good job separating the good power supplies from the poor ones.
The may not be lying about Taiwanese capacitors as there's a large variance between companies and rating.
There are few brands that are recommendable across the board as it depends on the usage. For example, the Corsair VS, an entry-level power supply, is a perfectly serviceable power supply when you're talking rigs that don't use a lot of power, as in no overclocking and either integrated graphics or a discrete graphics card that doesn't use supplementary power (like most 1050 TIs). Your current power supply is of unimpressive quality, but it's also not likely
dangerous for your current specs, as long as you're not overclocking; the GTX 1060 isn't particularly power-hungry. A better quality power supply is
definitely recommended when talking about getting a high-end, recent Intel or AMD chip with eventually upgrading the GPU.
We go on a lot about power supplies and some people find it exhausting, but we see a
lot of people coming here who see their components have shorter lives because they didn't spend $20 or $30 more on a power supply and now their $300 GPU is recycling center material. The more people we can save from that, the happier we are!