We took the time to put our power supplies under a multimeter to determine the extreme values of each power supply

We came under a little scrutiny in our last review because we used hard drives to perform our “stress testing.”  Well all you EE folks can eat your hearts out because we built our own resistance platform out of junk found around our lab and the local university basement.  After several power supplies and ECS motherboards later, we came up with something capable of putting our power supplies under 300W of load (60W on the +3.3V, 100W on the +5.0V, and 140W on the +12V rail).

Below is a table of the Voltages we recorded while the system was under load. Using a multimeter we measured the power supplies from the ATX cable. The highest and lowest values demonstrated were recorded.

Measured Voltages

 

+3.3V Low

+3.3V High

+5V Low

+5V High

+12V Low

+12V High

Allied AL-A400ATX

3.260

3.280

4.965

5.005

11.780

11.880

Antec TrueControl 550

3.275

3.320

4.970

5.015

11.880

11.990

Antec TruePower 330

3.280

3.315

4.980

5.030

11.920

11.995

Enermax EG465AX-VE FCA 460W

3.295

3.330

4.980

5.040

11.960

12.020

Enermax EG651P-VE FMA 550W

3.300

3.325

4.985

5.045

11.965

12.030

Enhance ENS-0246 460W

3.290

3.320

4.950

5.040

11.895

11.980

Fortron FSP400-60PFN

3.280

3.320

4.985

5.025

11.895

12.000

Kingwin KWI-450WABK

3.300

3.340

4.985

5.040

11.990

12.220

PC Power & Cooling TurboCool 475

3.295

3.310

4.990

5.005

11.990

12.050

Sparkle FSP350-60PN

3.275

3.320

4.980

5.035

11.925

11.995

ThermalTake PurePower 480W

3.280

3.335

4.945

4.995

11.860

11.970

TTGI/SuperFlower 520SS 4Fan

3.300

3.355

5.005

5.080

11.995

12.235

TTGI/SuperFlower 420SS

3.305

3.350

4.990

5.045

11.990

12.225

TTGI/SuperFlower 350SS

3.295

3.365

4.995

5.040

11.995

12.195

TurboLink 420W

3.250

3.295

5.010

5.035

11.790

11.895

Vantec Ion 400W

3.270

3.320

4.925

5.040

11.880

11.940

Vantec Stealth 520W

3.260

3.335

4.925

5.045

11.890

11.945

Zalman ZM400A-APF

3.285

3.320

4.985

5.035

11.895

11.990

Our table confirms the reverse of the previous interference test. Again, the sturdier constructed power supplies ended up performing with the tigheset specifications.  The TurboCool 475 performed incredibly well; even with our high expectations we could not believe the performance. It is our guess that the PC Power & Cooling engineers really know what they are doing.

Interference Results Voltages Cont. (Fan Control Problems)
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  • unclebud - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link

    i came in here today looking for just the same thing though!
    we needs a new ps article! thanks in advance anandtech!
  • JustAnAverageGuy - Sunday, January 30, 2005 - link

    Dopey:

    It's an extremely old article. Nobody reads those except when they need to be pulled out of the vault.
  • Dopey - Wednesday, January 12, 2005 - link

    Sad to see no comments since 2003! ???
    Looking for a good power supply for AMD and review indicates that both Fortron & Zalman are good at not too high price. But looking at Antec True Power 330W I read "beware of the extremely modest +12V rail. If you are running a high end video card, or an Intel Pentium 4, this power supply simply will not produce enough juice." Both the Fortron &n Zalman deliver just 180 watts on the +12V rail while the Antec True Power 330W puts out 204 watts. And if you look at the whole list of PSUs reviewed 204 watts looks like a respecatable amount of power. So ... ????????????????????
  • MIDIman - Friday, November 7, 2003 - link

    I bought the Zalman 300w for $50 as a result of this article. Love it to death, but newegg stopped carrying it.

    1) What size fan is in the Fotron reviewed here, 120mm or 80mm?

    2) What is the model number of the 300w alternative to the Fortron FSP400-60PFN?

    3) Isn't the Sparkle FSP350-60PN reviewed here also a fotron, and what is the model number of its 300w alternative?
  • Anonymous User - Monday, October 27, 2003 - link

    You state for those PSU's that have good amoubt of voltage for the 3,3V are good for AMD.

    It will also be nice to say that most new motherboard from AMD are now using 12 RAIL e.g. 8RDA3+ many more and from what ive seen all K8 mobos use 12 RAIL

    all in all good review.

    What i have found with my TT320W that when you stress it too much and it heats up it will shit down whole system.

    Also if your PC is off for many hours if you touch the PSU its worm :S

    Ordered my Antec 550W True Control

    Also you should show how to short the old PSU so user can use 2 PSU in one system..

    I run my whole system on a 480W ProSourse untill my 550W Antec TC is here

    My GFFX5900 runs on a dedicated PSU 300W soon it will have a dedicated 480 ProSource :D

    And all my 12 fans run on a 300W generic PSU

    Also TT's seem not to like when to many devices are connected to it
  • Anonymous User - Tuesday, October 14, 2003 - link

    To know how much the exhaust air will heat a room you have to know not only its temperature but also its volume. It would be simpler to measure the efficiency of the supply.

    The tests were not very thorough at all because if they were they would have included electrical noise and current measurements and testing at full power.
  • Anonymous User - Saturday, September 13, 2003 - link

    The memory errors could be due to bad filtering more than cable shielding. Putting a 'scope on the outputs would would provide a graphic portrayal of output quality. <hint, hint> :-)

    *TimDaniels*
  • Anonymous User - Sunday, September 7, 2003 - link

    I enjoyed reading the article and I think it was very well written and the tests were very thorough. Although the article discusses "heat" and examines each power supply to see how well they deal with the heat issue, I think from a consumers point of view, you should have measured the difference in the temperature of the exhaust that is emitted from the power supply. For me that is a real issue as the heat that emits from my existing power supply probably raises the room temperature by 7 to 8 degress (to the point of making it uncomforable to stay in the room on a hot day). I want a power supply that doesn't blow out hot air. Which one of these blows the coolest air?
  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 22, 2003 - link

    As much care was taken in creating the title as in testing the power supplies.

    I hope to see another Anandtech power supply review soon, only one with proper testing. I have to give Anandtech an A for effort in this case, but I can't still give them a passing grade. Please consult with a specialist in this field for any future test.
  • Anonymous User - Wednesday, August 20, 2003 - link

    Is it just me or does the article title seems a little off? "2003 Power Supply Roundup Part II: Better Faster Cheaper" Faster? A faster P/S?

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