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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  • dinkumthinkum - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    I also was stung by an Antec about 5 years ago. I read later that they switched suppliers at some point and quality suffered. I switched to FSP and later Corsair/Seasonic, so far so good.

    I had a small form factor FSP die on me mysteriously but I suspect that was due to the level of chalk dust in the room. I replaced it with a Seasonic, which has been amazingly quiet and reliable.
  • Phaedrus2129 - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    That was the 2005/2006 Fuhjyyu capacitor incident. It affected the TruePower, TruePower II, and Smartpower units. Those PSUs were shipped with Fuhjyyu capacitors on the secondary, which are extremely unreliable. Antec claims their manufacturer (CWT) put them on without permission to save cost; CWT claims Antec specc'd them that way. Either way, Antec and CWT parted company, and now all Antec PSUs use Japanese or mid-range Taiwanese capacitors.

    In other words, they had some bad units in 2005/6, that doesn't make them bad for all time. Their current lineup is excellent, baring the Basiq line.
  • Pessimism - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    Saying a power supply exploded at 50% load is not enough. For maximum impact, post photographs of its remains after attempted use.
  • sviola - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    Nice Review. I look forward for more reviews like this and, who knows, a PSU round-up in the same way of the gpus and memory round-ups.
  • iamezza - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    Loved the review. I liked the humorous writing style and didn't think it was too unprofessional.
  • xi0s - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    PC Power & Cooling

    Nice review, though seeing how simple it is to test PSU's and how many more players there are on the market these days, I would've much preferred a roundup of atleast 5 PSU's instead of a measly 3. Not that you didn't make a point here, but surely you could've done more with it.
  • ClagMaster - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    Why get an Antec TP-550 when you can purchase a Seasonic SS-560KM Modular Power supply for a few dollars more and get top-notch performance and reliability ?

    Corsair power supplies (manufactured by Seasonic) are also excellent too. But the Seasonics are the best.
  • softdrinkviking - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    is actually a pretty big fan company in the asian PC market.
    they sell there fans in the big consumer electronics stores that have a DIY PC
    section, and in hobby stores. (here in japan)
    i will say that they are cheaper than most fans, but not the absolute cheapest.
  • JohnMD1022 - Friday, October 29, 2010 - link

    Why bother with a PSU that is not available everywhere?

    Restrict reviews to components that are available worldwide.
  • Beenthere - Saturday, October 30, 2010 - link

    Fanboism doesn't make a good PSU.

    Thankfully a few sites conduct proper load testing of PSUs so intelligent PC enthusiasts can make an informed decision. Without actual test results of specific PSU models a consumer has no means to tell good PSUs from ad hype. An educated consumer doesn't buy hype they buy quality, performance and value.

    One accurate PSU test is of far more value than a baseless fanbois opinion.

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