I, 4745454b, in order to save computer parts everywhere believe these facts about PSUs be to true. First, that no "fire hazard" PSU should ever be plugged in. Second, that one shouldn't run their PSU at or even near max load. It can be done yes, but even PSU reviews don't test what happens after doing it for years. And it lowers the efficiency of the unit, increases the temp, and noise from the fan. Third, adapters should never be used to force a PSU to do something it wasn't designed to do.
I've had some PMs about this, and this will be my final post in this thread on this subject. I am VERY aware of how PSUs work. Just because I said I only load a PSU to 80% of it's output max doesn't mean I thought a PSU could only output 80% of its listed wattage. Or that a bronze unit can only do 82%. How do I pick what size PSU I need? I figure out how much power I need. Both by reading reviews of the GPU I'm running and from adding the stated TDPs. They are usually close together. For this mythical rig, lets say I need 350W of power. Because I personally chose to load a PSU to only 80% of it's 12V rail, that means I need a PSU that can output 437.5W. Might be a 450W, but I'd probably just move to a good 500W. I've met people on this forum who want to only load a PSU to 50%, because that's where a PSU is most efficient. This means they need 700W on the 12V side, so they'd probably pick a 750W.
In my post above I did use the " " symbols when I said "limit". I know there is no OCP setting on a 430W PSU that limits the 12V output to 307W. Duh. Read this sentence again.
But even still this is (400W * .82 = 328W) higher then the "300W limit" of what a 430W PSU should output.
I am really at a total loss as to why some think it's ok to use some adapters and pop a card with a draw too high in this system. Mathematically it barely works out. I highly doubt it would work out over a period of years. YOU can run a PSU at near 100% load if you want, but most of the time people would argue it shouldn't be done. And I feel if this were any other thread people would agree.
PSU lifespan doesn't necessarily decrease as load increases.
Perhaps, I agree how much this is true depends on the platform. As mentioned above there are plenty of junk PSUs that fail to make it through tested because they increased the load. But loading any platform up to 100% and expecting it to last isn't something I'd risk with anyone's money. Again, any other thread and people would say it's too close to the max and to upgrade the PSU. I'm not sure why this thread seems to be so opposite of any other I've been in.
The OP has disappeared and I think I will too. I highly urge anyone reading this later on to believe me.