Antec Voltage Regulation and Quality

+3.3V regulation
Load Voltage
10% 3.41V (+3.33%)
20% 3.41V (+3.33%)
50% 3.39V (+2.73%)
80% 3.37V (+2.12%)
100% 3.36V (+1.81%)
110% 3.36V (+1.81%)

 

+5V regulation
Load Voltage
10% 5.16V (+3.2%)
20% 5.15V (+3.0%)
50% 5.13V (+2.60%)
80% 5.10V (+2.00%)
100% 5.09V (+1.8%)
110% 5.08V (+1.6%)

 

+12V regulation
Load Voltage best/worst
10% 12.18V (+1.50%) / 12.17V (+1.42%)
20% 12.17V (+1.42%) / 12.16V (+1.33%)
50% 12.12V (+1.00%) / 12.10V (+0.83%)
80% 12.08V (+0.66%) / 12.05V (+0.42%)
100% 12.05V (+0.42%) / 12.01V (+0.08%)
110% 12.03V (+0.25%) / 12.00V (+0.00%)

All +12V show almost the same performance and still stay above 12.00V at 110% load.+3.3V starts very high and reaches 3.36V at full load. The same goes for the +5V rail, which starts with +3.2% and ends at +1.6%.

Ripple and Noise

+3.3V ripple quality
Load ripple and noise
10% 4.70mV
20% 5.50mV
50% 7.20mV
80% 9.30mV
100% 9.70mV
110% 10.90mV

 

+5V ripple quality
Load ripple and noise
10% 7.30mV
20% 8.00mV
50% 9.30mV
80% 10.80mV
100% 13.30mV
110% 15.20mV

 

+12V ripple quality
Load ripple and noise
10% 7.90mV
20% 10.10mV
50% 13.80mV
80% 19.60mV
100% 21.30mV
110% 33.70mV

Holy moly! All of the rails have no remarkable transients and ripple is always below 50% of the allowed level. +3.3V only just exceeds 10mV (at 110%), which is impressive. Overall, these are exceptional results and deserve praise; we wish every manufacturer would do as well!

Antec TruePower New Internals Antec Noise Levels and Efficiency
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  • MrSpadge - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    I know your plan was not to privde full market coverage.. but still, if an PSU as expensive as the Antect is included, which still gets "only" 80+ Bronze, it would have been nice to see a 80+ Gold heavy hitter like the Enermax 87+ or Seasonic X series included. In my opinion they're as good as ~500W PSUs currently get.

    MrS
  • EnzoFX - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    I really can't see a reason to turning to budget PSU's when there are often great ones on sale.

    For example, the Corsair 400 W one, every now and then, goes for $20 AR. Antec has a similar offering, at similar price, the EarthWatts 430W I believe. In higher range, another great example: The Corsair 650 TX for around $65 AR. In regards to my personal preference, all of these are known to be very quiet.

    Granted, you do have to wait for the good pricing, but I consider it to happen often enough to simply pick one up when they do and have a spare ready. I suppose if you really can't wait, then you'd have to consider the other brands.
  • adrien_n - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    I've bought a Corsair CX400 PSU and it's efficient, silent, stable and it around 40 EUR I think.

    Bought it after reading about it on http://www.canardpc.com/dossier-36-450-Corsair_CX_... (french) (the whole article is a worthy read if you understand french). It's rated at 400W but if you sum up the powers, you get over 500W.
  • Stas - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    I will always stand by Corsair PSUs. The PSU in my rig, CMPSU-520HX, has been reliable for 3 years. Outlived everything else in my machine (3 video cards, 2 CPUs, dozen of HDDs, 3 mobos, even 3 cases lol). Granted I buy quality parts or don't buy any at all, so none of those pieces actually died on me (except a 4 y.o. Hitachi HDD). I've also put in about 15 of Corsair PSUs in clients' rigs (from 400 to 850W versions, multi-12V-rails and single) in the past year and a half. Not a single one died or caused any instability. All are dead silent, too. Corsair's PSUs has become a standard in my eyes. Yes, there are more efficient offerings but they cost in the upper 100s and mid 200s. Between $50 and $150, I don't even think about what PSU to get, I just approximate the consumption and through the appropriate Corsair in the cart.
  • chrnochime - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    Well they either use CWT or Seasonic, so they're reliable because of these companies. IIRC they don't have any PSU that's specifically made *by* their own factory, all of their PSU are rebranded ones.
  • strikeback03 - Monday, November 1, 2010 - link

    Well, that is the case with most PSUs though. Corsair does pick good ODM designs and specify good components for the builds.
  • HollyDOL - Tuesday, November 2, 2010 - link

    I am very happy with Corsair PSUs as well and can only recommend... high efficiency, silent, very good current stability...
  • gusc3669 - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    On page 1 under the Techsolo Black Mamba STP-550 I know that this PSU didn't perform but...

    "It just keeps getting better! This PSU is not available in the US, but it's still a nice representative of the crap-section."
  • Mr Perfect - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    Every once in a while it's good to call out the low end products like that Mamba, especially when it comes to PSUs. There are so many people who buy horribly cheap PSUs, or get one bundled with a case, and then see their whole machine go up in smoke. Which might actually make this more important the testing good supplies...

    It would also be helpful to explain some of the features and components of the supplies though. I imagine there are quite a few people who don't know what things like PFC are, or even that it existed.
  • Calin - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    Reading only reviews from decent and high quality power supplies will suggest to the reader that all power supplies are decent or high quality. Good to know (at least every once in a while) that a certain power supply did blew up at not more than half the supposed load

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