i've bought a pc in 2016 witohut an intergrated gpu and this came in it, so im not planning to putting in a build since it already is in my buld, although i wish it wasnt. i wanted to game on it though, last year i got a 1050 ti in it, i was a bit worried though since the psu was only 250 watts, its been working fine but a few months back, there was a very loud and strange noise coming from the pc like a fan was struggling to move, i think it came from the psu, i ledt it for a few days and the noise hasnt returned, although im still a bit worried if something might happen to my pc if this psu dies, money's not a problem, but i just dont want to spend money on something that i dont need, so do i need to buy a new psu? my other components are: i3 4170, 8gb ram, toshuba hdd 7200 500gb, and (as already mentioned) gtx 1050 tiLemme guess, it's a HP office pc from bestbuy or something? Don't put that in any system you plan on building.
ok, thanks for the advice, i think i will buy a gray corsair vs 450 but i just want to ask you what does this "remark: 3.3v & 5v combined load: 85w" mean?I would buy a new one, even if that were not the current problem. You are risking a fire, with that junker.
thanks for the advice, but could you please answer my question?I would not get the VS corsair either. While better quality, than what you have, they are still not very good. Go with the grey label CX, at a minimum.
i plan to upgrade even further and thats one of the reasons i want to get a new psu, id like to put an i5 4460 or another 1150 socket i5 i just dont know which one yet and most likely an rx 570 that i'd overclock, which psu would you reccomend for about 50-60 dollars on here?I would 100% buy a new psu. The psu is the one thing in the system you don't skimp on. If you don't plan on getting a more power hungry gpu or cpu, then a reputable 400w power supply is more than enough for that system. Otherwise, it doesn't hurt to spend an extra 10 or 15 dollars getting a slightly stronger psu just for the extra headroom. But 400w is plenty for a system like that.
I learned this lesson the hard way when I first started. Used an old salvaged psu on a fx 6300/gtx 560 ti. Killed the psu in about 2 months. I was very lucky that nothing else went with it, or that it didn't start a fire as I left the pc for about an hour and came back to a burning smell and a black screen. Get a better psu, trust me.
thanksYour PSU's wattage is split up, for different voltages, 12, 3.3, and 5 respectively. The 3.3v and 5v system make up 85w, of the PSU's available wattage.
Ok I'm going to try it out although I'm afraid it will start a fire cause its only 250 watts😬Sort of, a 1050 requires a 300W at least (the card itself uses about 75W under load). You can still try it out, but if your computer shuts down randomly it's because you don't have enough power for the other components.
It's 250 watts so I'm a bit worried😬It doesn't seem like a high quality unit. I can't tell the wattage or if it's even 80Plus...
You should get a new PSU
But will this psu do for now, I'm afraid to try it out cause I think it will die and components will die with itTry to get around a 550w from a known company (seasonic, corsair, evga g series) so at least if you upgrade down the road you will be set with that PSU
But will this psu do for now, I'm afraid to try it out cause I think it will die and components will die with it
What exactly could I be risking, is it only a fire or could it be something bigger like killing components if the psu dies?As I wrote above, you can try out that PSU. If it doesn't supply enough power it will just either not turn on or turn off randomly during heavy stress. So don't worry about it catching fire or anything, unless of course it's a really cheap PSU you found somewhere. If it's a brand name PSU it'll be safe to test it, if it's not a well known brand you could be risking it. But give it a test run once or twice and see how it runs.
What exactly could I be risking, is it only a fire or could it be something bigger like killing components if the psu dies?