Personal PSU Controversy - What the f---?
Posted: Wed Aug 08, 2007 8:49 pm
So I have a PC Power and Cooling 850SSI, which was basically the biggest, most badass power supply ever when I bought it for my gaming system last May. However, I am having a large number of issues that some are tracing to the power supply. Not that the power supply is faulty, but rather that there's simply not enough power to go around. By sheer wattage it seems OK, but I've been told that watts aren't everything.
The PSU has four 12v rails rated at 17A each. If my understanding of power supplies is correct, if one has multiple rails, and power is not utilized in one rail, it becomes trapped in that rail and the rest of the system can't touch it. Also, I have been told that dual 7900GTX SLI requires 2x22A rails (separate or on one big rail). This power supply has four 12v rails rated at 17A each and two PCI-E six pin power connectors. Each of these feeds a 7900GTX graphics board. Three SATA cables feed three hard drives, and two molex connectors drive two optical drives and some fans (there are eight molex power connectors total on two strings of four each). All mobo connectors are correctly attached, including the extra four-pin that plugs in for SLI systems!
The system configuration is as follows:
CPU: Opteron 170 at stock speed, 2.0GHz
RAM: 4GB DDR500 @ 400
MOBO: Asus A8N32-SLI Deluxe
HDD1: 150GB Raptor
HDD2 & 3: 250GB Caviar
GPU: Dual 7900GTX SLI
PSU: TurboCool 850SSI
OS: Windows Vista Ultimate x64
I have been told by a system integrator friend that my power supply is not enough. His logic is that each card by nVidia spec needs 22A, and I only have dual 17A, which starves my cards. I have further found this Thermaltake 250 watt dedicated graphics power supply which supplies 21A (max of 25A). nVidia certifies it for dual 7900GTX SLI as long as I have another power supply off their "All other SLI Configurations" list. The 850 certainly outstrips those units.
The solution based on these assumptions is to purchase the following:
- A Thermaltake 250w dedicated graphics unit
- A 2x PCI-E to 1x PCI-E joiner OR determine whether the four pin molexs are on different rails and if so, use a molex-to-PCI-E to combine the two
All I have to say to all this is WTF mate?
Note that none of these problems ever occurred under Windows XP with only 2GB RAM installed. I had a K8N Diamond Plus die on me, the PCI slot failed and I don't know if this was a manufacturing defect or a result of not enough power. Please enlighten me.
The PSU has four 12v rails rated at 17A each. If my understanding of power supplies is correct, if one has multiple rails, and power is not utilized in one rail, it becomes trapped in that rail and the rest of the system can't touch it. Also, I have been told that dual 7900GTX SLI requires 2x22A rails (separate or on one big rail). This power supply has four 12v rails rated at 17A each and two PCI-E six pin power connectors. Each of these feeds a 7900GTX graphics board. Three SATA cables feed three hard drives, and two molex connectors drive two optical drives and some fans (there are eight molex power connectors total on two strings of four each). All mobo connectors are correctly attached, including the extra four-pin that plugs in for SLI systems!
The system configuration is as follows:
CPU: Opteron 170 at stock speed, 2.0GHz
RAM: 4GB DDR500 @ 400
MOBO: Asus A8N32-SLI Deluxe
HDD1: 150GB Raptor
HDD2 & 3: 250GB Caviar
GPU: Dual 7900GTX SLI
PSU: TurboCool 850SSI
OS: Windows Vista Ultimate x64
I have been told by a system integrator friend that my power supply is not enough. His logic is that each card by nVidia spec needs 22A, and I only have dual 17A, which starves my cards. I have further found this Thermaltake 250 watt dedicated graphics power supply which supplies 21A (max of 25A). nVidia certifies it for dual 7900GTX SLI as long as I have another power supply off their "All other SLI Configurations" list. The 850 certainly outstrips those units.
The solution based on these assumptions is to purchase the following:
- A Thermaltake 250w dedicated graphics unit
- A 2x PCI-E to 1x PCI-E joiner OR determine whether the four pin molexs are on different rails and if so, use a molex-to-PCI-E to combine the two
All I have to say to all this is WTF mate?
Note that none of these problems ever occurred under Windows XP with only 2GB RAM installed. I had a K8N Diamond Plus die on me, the PCI slot failed and I don't know if this was a manufacturing defect or a result of not enough power. Please enlighten me.