Voltage Regulation and Quality

+3.3V regulation
Load Voltage
10% +2.24%
20% +2.00%
50% +1.42%
80% +0.80%
100% +0.30%
110% +0.08%

 

+5V regulation
Load Voltage
10% +0.80%
20% +0.60%
50% -0.12%
80% -0.70%
100% -1.29%
110% -1.40%

 

+12V regulation
Load Voltage
10% +2.80%
20% +2.66%
50% +2.30%
80% +1.97%
100% +1.49%
110% +0.54%

Results are measured under room temperature using 115VAC. +12V starts very high since the tests are conformed to ATX standards. As expected, the 12V rail shows low drops and handles up to 41A as well. +3.3V and +5V are well regulated and not too weak. 5V in particular is very stable with only a small difference between 10% and 110% load.

Ripple and Noise

+3.3V ripple quality
Load Ripple and noise
10% 7mV
20% 9mV
50% 14mV
80% 16mV
100% 18mV
110% 22mV

 

+5V ripple quality
Load Ripple and noise
10% 6mV
20% 7mV
50% 8mV
80% 11mV
100% 19mV
110% 21mV

 

+12V ripple quality (worst rail)
Load Ripple and noise
10% 9mV
20% 10mV
50% 14mV
80% 22mV
100% 25mV
110% 29mV

Maybe we should stop measuring ripple and noise for Seasonic products since the results make their opponents angry. We've used up all of the positive words in our vocabulary in other Seasonic articles, so we'll just repeat what we said in the X-460FL review: The voltage quality is absolutely flawless. Small transients are no big deal for 3.3V and 5V, and +12V hardly has any noise at all. In short, this is an excellent design.

Let's Take a Look Inside Noise, Efficiency, and Power Factor
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  • jed22281 - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    ^this!

    JohnnyGuru is where it's at for PSU reviews.
    Badcapt.net is alos a pretty handy resource.
    Anand for SSD's FTW! :-)
  • jed22281 - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    badcaps.net
  • piroroadkill - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    Yesss, I do love JonnyGuru for OklahomaWolf's style.
  • jabber - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    Wouldnt it be better and more reliable to have the main power input lead actually hardwired into the PSU rather than through a connector?

    After all thats the one lead you are going to use.
  • 7Enigma - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    I was thinking the same thing. Other than the coolness factor of being able to transport just the power brick I don't see a purpose and there is sure to be a minute penalty to efficiency by having those modular.
  • strikeback03 - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    If they sell different length cables it is nice, for example with the provided 24-pin cable the length is great if you have a bottom-mounted PSU, but it is a lot of extra to hide if you have top-mounted. If they made a shorter cable for top-mounted cases it would be a benefit.
  • somedude1234 - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    I've done a build with this PSU, and I appreciated the fact that all of the cables were modular during the build process. Not having the bulky main power cables getting in the way until I was ready to route them properly was nice.

    Also, based on the results it doesn't look like the performance is suffering.
  • djc208 - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    Think I found the PSU for my next upgrade! This or the passive version might be a good idea for my WHS too.
  • Ptaltaica - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    Great review Martin, but there's one thing I wish you had emphasized a bit more-the significance of that Sanyo Denki fan.

    We all know that most power supplies use cheap, crappy fans; even the ball bearing ones in most units are Chinese-made garbage of questionable quality, and in my experience fan failure is the cause of an awful lot of power supply failures.

    The Sanyo Denki fans Seasonic is using in these units, by contrast, are some of the most reliable, longest-lived and highest quality fans on the market. The impellers are balanced with little blobs of epoxy to minimize wobbling and subsequent wear on the bearings, and they have some of the tightest and lowest-drag bearing assemblies I've ever seen; the only other companies that are in the same quality ballpark are Nidec and EBM-Papst, in my opinion. Delta, Adda and NMB-MAT (aka Panaflo) are decent, but even they're not as good as Sanyo Denki, Nidec or Papst. And everything else is pretty much garbage.

    As far as I can tell, the 9S1212F404 in this PS is a tachless variation of the F401 (datasheet here: http://db.sanyodenki.co.jp/product_db/cooling/dcfa... ). The F401 has a MTBF of 40,000 hours... And that doesn't sound like a lot compared to what some companies advertise. Except that that rating is with a 90% survival rate, and rated at 60*C. Rate it at 25*C or whatever like a lot of companies do and it's probably closer to 160-200,000 hours, if not more.

    Given that it only runs intermittently in the X series power supplies, I can easily see one of these power supplies lasting 10-20 years or longer. There are very, very, very few consumer goods of any kind these days that can legitimately make a claim like that, and-thanks in large part to the SD fans-the X-Series power supplies are the only PSUs I've seen that can.

    i think the relatively small price premium for these units relative to other similarly-sized PSUs is worth it on that fact alone; I've used the X-Series power supplies in every computer I've built at work since they came out, including any of our servers that do not require redundant power supplies, and I'll continue to use them for as long as they'll make them.
  • iamkyle - Wednesday, March 23, 2011 - link

    Once again, no bar charts means no direct comparisons to other PSU's.

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