OCZ Noise Levels and Efficiency

Sound Pressure Level
Load dB(A)
10% 18
20% 19
50% 20
80% 24
100% 26
110% 26

Its nice to see that the OCZ Fatal1ty 550W is silent at low loads. Even at 50% you can't hear anything, provided there is a thick-walled case between the PSU and your ear. You'll definetly hear the PSU at full load, but the noise level is still tolerable. Nice work here!

Efficiency and PFC

230VAC, 50Hz
Load Efficiency PFC
10% 73% 0.840
20% 83% 0.877
50% 85% 0.930
80% 84% 0.952
100% 82% 0.958
110% 82% 0.962

 

115VAC, 60Hz
Load Efficiency PFC
10% 71% 0.941
20% 81% 0.949
50% 84% 0.976
80% 83% 0.983
100% 82% 0.985
110% 81% 0.986

Now we see why the OCZ Fatal1ty lacks the 80 Plus Bronze certification. The efficiency is always below 84% at 115VAC and very bad at 10% load. OCZ would definitely benefit from an improved design, though with gaming PCs we can pretty much guarantee that you'll be idling at closer to 20% load so it's not a huge concern for the target market. Anyhow, the power factor is good and reaches more than 0.960 on both power grids.

Overall, the OCZ Fatal1ty delivers decent voltage regulation, a nice power factor, reasonable efficiency, and low noise levels; unfortunately, there's a high amount of ripple and the efficiency could be better. Considering these results the OCZ Fatak1ty 550W is just one among many PSUs vying for your dollar. If you can find it on sale for around $50, it becomes a better proposition—and that's exactly what you get if you go with Newegg and their $15 mail-in rebate, but we'd prefer a $50 price without the hassle of an MIR.

OCZ Voltage Regulation and Quality Antec TruePower New TP-550
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  • jimhsu - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    Silentpcreview also does high quality PSU reviews, though aimed at a slightly different market (hence the name). They do review performance PSUs though.
  • Mathieu Bourgie - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    There's also the EggXpert (NewEgg forums) Tiered Power Supply List that's a good reference (http://www.eggxpert.com/forums/thread/323050.aspx)... as well as *cough* shameless plug *cough* my own article on the subject "Warning: 6 Surefire Ways of Blowing Up Your Computer Due to an Inadequate Power Supply" located here: http://www.hardware-revolution.com/warning-6-suref...
    Due for an update for the recommendations at the end, rest is still pretty much valid.
  • Phaedrus2129 - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    The EggXpert list a terrible reference, out of date and full of mistakes.
  • tomoyo - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    There's an amazing amount of mediocre/crap psus that are in the Tier 2 section, and yet there's also some very good psus that are somehow Tier 4. I'd say a mostly useless list.
  • hybrid2d4x4 - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    +1 for SilentPCReview's PSU reviews, though I'd say it's not necessarily a niche for audiophiles/noise-reducing obsessive-compulsives as the name may suggest: they only have one page (of 5-7) for acoustics. The rest is a knowledgeable analysis with some of the most detailed electrical testing and thermal torture testing.
  • erple2 - Wednesday, November 3, 2010 - link

    The folks at pcper.com are also particularly good at doing proper PSU reviews. They're one of the only ones I know of that do an analysis of cross-loading - ie heavily load one rail and see how it affects the voltage at the other leads (3.3, 5, 12). They're also a group that I've come to rely on for solid PSU reviews. Now if only they'd do more testing ...
  • Phaedrus2129 - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    There should have been some comment on the immediately obvious signs that the TechSolo was going to be mediocre. First thing pointed out should have been the "P4PFC" on the label. This indicates that A.) This PSU is actually an ATX12V 1.x era unit, since it's advertising "P4" or "Pentium 4 compatibility", and second having "PFC" after the P4 indicates that this is a platform that doesn't come with PFC as stock, indicating that it's a lower-end unit.

    Did the TechSolo fail on the primary or secondary side (before or after the transformer)? If it failed on the primary (perhaps the rectifying bridge went nuclear?) then it would be unlikely, though still possible, for it to kill components. If it was a secondary side component that failed then this PSU is a potential time bomb waiting to wipe out your PC.
  • mmatis - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    on September 12th from Newegg ($64.99 with free shipping and $20 MIR), the OCZ Fatal1ty OCZ550FTY doesn't seem like a bad buy to me. But then it's just running an AMD X4, a couple of hard drives, optical drive, and low end video card.
  • slickr - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    Good job in this review, though I would like to see more PSU reviews and possibly include A-Power supplies.
  • Beenthere - Thursday, October 28, 2010 - link

    There are a lot of posers in the PSU market including some non PSU based companies adding questionable PSUs to the product mix. I'll continue to just buy PC Power and Cooling PSUs which are the gold standard of the PC industry. No guessing required with a PCPC PSU. They perform as advertised and are guaranteed for 5-7 yrs. depending on model.

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