RE 250 watt and ATX 2.1 needed to kep xp 2000 board runnin..

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Archived from groups: alt.comp.hardware,alt.comp.hardware.homebuilt,alt.comp.hardware.pc-homebuilt (More info?)

We Live for the One we Die for the One (Mr_fred@yahoo.com.au)
wrote in message <0qvhb0lcd7p6hapenrppff2gk8ffdh874f@4ax.com>

> Iam just using a 250 watt power supply to try to get an Xp 2000 system
> running and it powers up but thats about it not a beep ?
>
> The PSU i think is 2.01 but is 250 watt would this stop the PC from
> working all i have is the cpu fan, vidcard no other fans connected ?

How many watts can your 250 watt power supply output? Just because
it's labelled "250W" doesn't mean it's labelled accurately, and then
there's the matter of the power capacity from each voltage line.

A high quality 250W supply, such as a PC Power & Cooling or Fortron,
should be able to run an XP 2000+ system, unless it contains a very
power hungry video card. But in reality most such systems will need a
supply labelled for at least 300-350W.
 
Archived from groups: alt.comp.hardware.pc-homebuilt (More info?)

On Sun, 30 May 2004 05:49:06 -0700, do_not_spam_me while doing time wrote:

> We Live for the One we Die for the One (Mr_fred@yahoo.com.au)
> wrote in message <0qvhb0lcd7p6hapenrppff2gk8ffdh874f@4ax.com>
>
>> Iam just using a 250 watt power supply to try to get an Xp 2000 system
>> running and it powers up but thats about it not a beep ?
>>
>> The PSU i think is 2.01 but is 250 watt would this stop the PC from
>> working all i have is the cpu fan, vidcard no other fans connected ?
>
> How many watts can your 250 watt power supply output? Just because
> it's labelled "250W" doesn't mean it's labelled accurately, and then
> there's the matter of the power capacity from each voltage line.
>
> A high quality 250W supply, such as a PC Power & Cooling or Fortron,
> should be able to run an XP 2000+ system, unless it contains a very
> power hungry video card. But in reality most such systems will need a
> supply labelled for at least 300-350W.


It's not really the total wattage, ie, 250 vs 300 but how the wattage is
distributed to the system. A 300 psu may not provide enough power on
the 5v, 3.3v or 12v lines. That's why sometimes a 200-250w is enough to
power a average pc. I lost my spreadsheet for guessing the power
required on each line based on system components. Generally true a name
brand larger wattage psu should be enough additional power.
 
Archived from groups: alt.comp.hardware.pc-homebuilt (More info?)

jaster wrote:
> On Sun, 30 May 2004 05:49:06 -0700, do_not_spam_me while doing time wrote:
>
>
>>We Live for the One we Die for the One (Mr_fred@yahoo.com.au)
>>wrote in message <0qvhb0lcd7p6hapenrppff2gk8ffdh874f@4ax.com>
>>
>>>Iam just using a 250 watt power supply to try to get an Xp 2000 system
>>>running and it powers up but thats about it not a beep ?
>>>
>>>The PSU i think is 2.01 but is 250 watt would this stop the PC from
>>>working all i have is the cpu fan, vidcard no other fans connected ?
>>
>>How many watts can your 250 watt power supply output? Just because
>>it's labelled "250W" doesn't mean it's labelled accurately, and then
>>there's the matter of the power capacity from each voltage line.
>>
>>A high quality 250W supply, such as a PC Power & Cooling or Fortron,
>>should be able to run an XP 2000+ system, unless it contains a very
>>power hungry video card. But in reality most such systems will need a
>>supply labelled for at least 300-350W.
>
>
>
> It's not really the total wattage, ie, 250 vs 300 but how the wattage is
> distributed to the system. A 300 psu may not provide enough power on
> the 5v, 3.3v or 12v lines. That's why sometimes a 200-250w is enough to
> power a average pc. I lost my spreadsheet for guessing the power
> required on each line based on system components. Generally true a name
> brand larger wattage psu should be enough additional power.
>
The AMD recommendations for Athlon XP systems are
+3.3V: 28A, +5V:30A, +12V:15/18A
(Sorry, I have no link at hand...)

Roy