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Discussion PSU recommendations and power supply discussion thread - Tom's hardware

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Only generally, nothing stops you from wiring a room with a 240 volt outlet. Just a bit of an expense if you are the home owner or you can convince your landlord.

But it also comes down to the average person. If you need more than 1500W to run your home computer you are doing something beyond the normal. If it is rendering or AI, then that is the sign to start renting a server.
 
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Stupid that it’s going to get to a point (at this rate) where people in the us can’t use more power hungry components.
About the time for entire US to convert from 120V to 240V, like the rest of the world. :) And while at it, convert to Metric as well. :cheese:

Not only you can hook up more powerful hardware, but PSUs are more efficient on 240V circuit than on 120V one.
E.g 80+ Titanium, at 100% load, is 90% efficient on 115V but 94% efficient on 230V.
 
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In new housing, maybe. But to retrofit existing homes and appliances would be quite the expense. Not like we don't have 240 volts, just reserved for larger appliances where efficiency is more important than safety. What we really need is redesigned outlets.

This would also include half of Japan (100V), Canada, Mexico, and large parts of South America.
 
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Came across a PSU that i haven't seen before. In one of the topics i'm part of, OP bought that PSU (topic).

Here, i'm asking PSU gurus what they think of that PSU;
Aigo GP750 750W.

Did find out that brand is: DarkFlash
Efficiency: 80+ Bronze
Warranty: 3 years.
Official specs page: Couldn't find it.
Review, non-English (in Vietnamese): https://www.f14lab.org/2023/12/review-aigo-gp750-750w.html

Review needs to be translated into English for reading.

From the review, i found out that:
OEM: GuangHaiDianZi.
PSU fails +3.3V transient response time, +3.3V also fails ripple test and PSU has less hold-up time than ATX standard specifies it to be.

So, crap quality unit? 🤔
 
My 2 cents as a fellow enthusiast:

I always recommend tier A 750w gold psu with a proven track record and good transient response. Even for mid or low end builds - as you would have no headaches for the 7 + years and no problems with GPU upgrades.

If he is using it for an upgrade, he should have his old PSU for trouble shooting I guess?

It could very well be defective CPU data and/or power lanes in the mobo. Don't know how the mobo was verified to be working before the purchase. eBay has buyer protection policies. Don't know where he purchased it and if the platform has such policies.

But yes, if there is a return window, I would suggest an exchange for a reliable unit from TT or MSI - good pricing and availability in Asian countries. The new FSP vita series is good as well and available in the region.
 
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Came across a PSU that i haven't seen before. In one of the topics i'm part of, OP bought that PSU (topic).

Here, i'm asking PSU gurus what they think of that PSU;
Aigo GP750 750W.

Did find out that brand is: DarkFlash
Efficiency: 80+ Bronze
Warranty: 3 years.
Official specs page: Couldn't find it.
Review, non-English (in Vietnamese): https://www.f14lab.org/2023/12/review-aigo-gp750-750w.html

Review needs to be translated into English for reading.

From the review, i found out that:
OEM: GuangHaiDianZi.
PSU fails +3.3V transient response time, +3.3V also fails ripple test and PSU has less hold-up time than ATX standard specifies it to be.

So, crap quality unit? 🤔
Yes.
 
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I always recommend tier A 750w gold psu with a proven track record and good transient response. Even for mid or low end builds - as you would have no headaches for the 7 + years and no problems with GPU upgrades.
It's down to the masses who doesn't care about PSU, as long as wattage number is to their likening and it costing as little as possible.

We try our best to educate people who come to the forums but we are fighting an uphill battle.
I think that in 30 years time, we still get people in the forums who have cheaped out on the PSU. Since as long as there are people willing to cheap out on PSUs, low/crap quality PSUs doesn't go anywhere, they remain.

For my standard regarding PSUs, i have it more strict than the average PSU tier list, whereby:
PC with dedicated GPU (e.g gaming build) - minimum good quality PSU (aka Tier A), preferably great quality PSU (aka best what money can buy).
PC without dedicated GPU (e.g office build) - minimum mediocre quality PSU (aka Tier B), preferably good quality PSU.

If he is using it for an upgrade, he should have his old PSU for trouble shooting I guess?
OP probably had far worse PSU than the "new" PSU they bought.

It could very well be defective CPU data and/or power lanes in the mobo.
Yeah, most likely MoBo issue. Did tell OP that as well.