Mnx4

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Aug 10, 2001
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Hey, im in the computer market and i'm not sure exactly how much power i'm going to need. The components are
AMD XP 1900+
Radeon 8500 AGP
Soltek SL-75DRV2
Modem/lan card
30 gig h.d.
100 MB zip internal drive
Santa Cruz sound
Koolance water cooling case
256 MB DDR ram
3 1/2 floppy
50X cdrom drive
cd burner

Im also thinking about over clocking and adding a few fans. I think 400 watts would be more than enough but im not all that sure. Also, enermax and antec are my top choices for the power supply. Thanks

Do you work at UPS? 'cuz i could have sworn you were checkin out my package!
 

Toejam31

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The two best makers of power supplies for home systems are PC Power & Cooling and Enermax.

No Antec PSU is comparable with the offerings from either of these two companies. I've got a pile of 'em in a box in the back of my shop. I like to strip the connectors out of them and make extensions. That's about all they are good for, IMHO. I wouldn't put one in the system you are describing unless you forced me at gunpoint.

These are the best:

<A HREF="http://www.pcpowerandcooling.com/products/power_supplies/index.htm" target="_new">http://www.pcpowerandcooling.com/products/power_supplies/index.htm</A>

Enermax is a cheaper PSU, but it's also the best for price/performance:

<A HREF="http://www.enermax.com.tw/" target="_new">http://www.enermax.com.tw/</A>

I wouldn't put less than 400 watts into that system, and more would be even better. Most people don't consider <i>redundancy</i> when ordering a PSU. The rule-of-thumb, from an electrician's standpoint, is 30% redundancy. That's means your system shouldn't pull more than 70% of the PSU's total running output for performance and safety.

<A HREF="http://www.pcpowerandcooling.com/maxpc/cases.htm" target="_new">http://www.pcpowerandcooling.com/maxpc/cases.htm</A>

This is the powerplant for your entire system, and it's got to last a few years. So don't skimp. Get a good PSU, with a decent warranty. You'll be glad that you did.

Toejam31

<font color=red>My Rig:</font color=red> <A HREF="http://www.anandtech.com/mysystemrig.html?rigid=6847" target="_new">http://www.anandtech.com/mysystemrig.html?rigid=6847</A>
____________________________________________________

<font color=purple>"Procrastination on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part."</font color=purple>
 

FatBurger

Illustrious
The Koolance case comes with a water-cooled PSU. Try that first, and it doesn't work, see about getting something else.

<font color=orange>Quarter</font color=orange> <font color=blue>Pounder</font color=blue> <font color=orange>Inside</font color=orange>
 
G

Guest

Guest
I don't think Koolance watercools their PSUs anymore, they probably figured it was a mistake since it offers no benefit and a leak into the power supply would create a pretty big mess.
 

FatBurger

Illustrious
You're right, I just looked at their website. Well, never mind then. I just bought a 431w Enermax though, if that helps you decide any.

<font color=orange>Quarter</font color=orange> <font color=blue>Pounder</font color=blue> <font color=orange>Inside</font color=orange>
 

Mnx4

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Thanks for your input. I actually decided on the enermax 431 watt PSU. I kinda feel its overkill, but as the guy above this post said that its okay to have such a high power source. Thanks again. Mnx4

Putting the laughter back in to Slaughter.
 

AMD_Man

Splendid
Jul 3, 2001
7,376
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Yes, I have a 431W Enermax Whisper as well. They are great PSUs!!

AMD technology + Intel technology = Intel/AMD Pentathlon IV; the <b>ULTIMATE</b> PC processor
 

Ed_Phoon

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There are many other good power supply makers around, not just antech and pcpower and cooling.
All those amd approved power supplies' makers are making high quality power supplies.