Sakkura
Illustrious
TJ Hooker :
Sakkura :
TJ Hooker :
valeman2012 :
loki1944 :
I could not possibly care less how efficient a PSU is; what I care about is how reliable it is.
Actrally it does matter...That saved power that save money on your power bill would allow you to buy more computer parts if you missing like few bucks or few cents that power saved PSU help you save money.
I would recommend punching in the numbers based on local electricity costs and your rig/amount of use and seeing how much this actually adds up to.
For example, if I take a 500W load (which is higher than most single GPU systems would ever draw even under max load), look at the worst case efficiency difference between 80+ and 80+ Titanium (14% better effeciency at 50% load), and say I'm running it 40 hours a week, every week of the year, it works out to a whopping ~$7.50 a year where I live. Admittedly, my local rates are much lower than a lot of people pay (~$0.05//kWh), but on the other hand the values I used for power consumption are definitely on the high side.
I think a lot of people overestimate the amount of money they're going to save with an efficient PSU.
If I run a more realistic average 300W load on a 600W PSU for 40 hours per week, then the difference between 80+ and 80+ Titanium over a year would be about 84 kWh. That would cost me about $24.
Call it a 5 year service life and that's total savings of $120. Pretty substantial.
I don't think it's enough to make 80+ Titanium worth it though, since the price premium for Titanium is much bigger than for Platinum or Gold. These days you can get a Gold rated unit for just a small premium over Bronze or 80+, so that's strong value for money.
But even if we assume you have a high end graphics card (system power draw of 300 W) and game 40 hours a week, those numbers would still be on the high side as neither 80+ or 80+ titanium are common. If we look the much more common Bronze vs Gold, difference in efficiency is now down to 5%. So your yearly cost difference is about $8.60, or ~$43 over 5 years.
I'm not trying to argue that efficiency is irrelevant in terms of utility bills, just saying that it depends on a lot of factors and should not be assumed to make a meaningful impact.
Your numbers are off. The difference between Bronze and Gold is 5.9% in the US and 4.5% in the EU, at 50% load. It's higher at the 20% and 100% load levels.
Besides, 80+ standard is common enough.