Seasonic Snow Silent 750W Power Supply Review

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dragget

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Dec 27, 2012
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"Unfortunately, the on/off switch for toggling hybrid mode is located on the back side of the PSU, so accessing your system's internals becomes necessary if you want to change fan modes."
Most likely they did it this way to avoid having two switches on the outside face of the PSU. If they had placed both switches there I can see people reaching around the back of their case to change fan modes and accidentally turning off their PC because they flipped the wrong switch.
 

Adroid

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Yea to be honest I prefer the fan/hybrid toggle on the INSIDE of my case anyway. I put my Seasonic Platinum 650W in hybrid mode a long time ago and forgot about it.

I don't see any need to flip the switch on and off, in fact I can't think of a single good reason why I would ever want to touch the thing again. So for me, it would be a con to have the switch on the outside of the case.
 

Aris_Mp

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this switch is much smaller than the on/off one so it is really hard to mix them up. Also the on/off switch is harder to activate. In any case as a reviewer I see this as a con, not a serious though. Some users out there will share my opinion while others won't.
 

dragget

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this switch is much smaller than the on/off one so it is really hard to mix them up.
If you were looking at the back of the PSU, then yes, but I'm assuming the more common situation where the user is reaching around the back of the case where they can't see. In this scenario, one would have to feel around the back with their hand so it's much easier to get it wrong. I almost never use the switch on the back of my PSU, so every two or three months when I DO use it, I have to fumble around in the back to find the switch. For your average user, having two switches back there would just be asking for trouble.
 
A lot of companies are putting the hybrid switch on the inside of the PSU. Just like the new units EVGA is putting out. It makes no sense to put the switch on the outside due to confusion with the on/off switch
 

dstarr3

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180 dollars for this? No.

For a rock-solid PSU with a 7-year warranty? This thing would power my next three or four computers. $180 for not having to buy another PSU for a decade is a damn good deal.

Regarding the fan switch, my PSU has a similar feature, and honestly, I imagine most people would set it at installation and never change it. I sure haven't.
 

Aris_Mp

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Indeed a PSU is an investment, something that unfortunately most people cannot see or understand while on the same time they have no problem spending serious money on GPUs and CPUs.

You can keep a good PSU for many system builds while a not reliable, cheap PSU besides breaking down fast can also destroy many of your system components.
 
Been looking for this on jonnyguru.... the 1050 watter scored a 10 in build quality and performance. My son bought the 1000 G2 cause it was cheaper than the 750 at the time.... the 1000 G2 is way too dang noisy. This wuda been nice.
 

Getting a good deal on a PSU that was released a while ago is one thing. That PSU had and has an MSRP of $90. Not $54. It's also bronze rated. Not saying that is a bad thing or a relevant thing, but efficiency does affect the MSRP of PSU's.
 
1. The current price is MSRP and will hold until there's some competition from vendors. The 1050 came out at $255 ... its $202 now; once there are enough supplies in the channel, it will be $139-$144 ... probably less

2. My son has a 1000 watt G2, I'd pay $50 if I didn't have to hear that fan all day, The G2 matched the performance and it's $105, the HX750i is surely worth the extra $10... The Antec HCG matches the BQ and it's $85

3. But like anything else, if you want that binned GPU, the best overclocking MoBo, the price premium suffers from the law of diminishing returns. Michael Phelps made millions coming home from the Olympics with Gold Medals .... how much did the guy with the silvers make ?

4. It is damn perty :)

A real nice street racing engine might cost ya $15k .... wanna take 2/10's of a second off that and ya can spend $50k
 

g-unit1111

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Yeah exactly it's an investment as much as the actual PC itself is. And I've seen enough builds on this site where I almost instantly recommend that people spend more money on a PSU. You're paying $350 for an i7 and $600 for a GTX 980TI, yet you won't pay more than $75 for a Corsair CX750. I mean WTF??? Like 99% of the time on this website the answer to most people's problems with their system is "buy a new PSU". And it is really sad when people don't see that's a huge investment.

Been looking for this on jonnyguru.... the 1050 watter scored a 10 in build quality and performance. My son bought the 1000 G2 cause it was cheaper than the 750 at the time.... the 1000 G2 is way too dang noisy. This wuda been nice.

I have both 850W and 750W versions of the G2 and I've never seen an issue with either one in regards to noise.
 


Especially when a 750 watt EVGA B2 is like $55

I have both 850W and 750W versions of the G2 and I've never seen an issue with either one in regards to noise.

Well... it's a matter of perspective. If you have two Gigabyte G1's, twin CPU fans, and say 6 case fans, you're not going to hear the PSU fan ... but if you invested a boatload of money in water cooling components, the radiator fans are spinning at 350 - 500 rpm under normal usage. The noise associated with that is below the audible range of hearing. To have that peace and quiet disturbed and your investment negated by the lack of a quiet PSU fan is disheartening.




 
That sure is one sexy PSU! I have the Seasonic 660W Platinum PSU, but I might haver to kick her to the curb for this fine young lady. I can just see her sitting inside my Enthoo Pro, now. That big window on the side of my Enthoo Pro would show her off real nicely. :p

Nice job, Seasonic!
 
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