FSP Blue Storm II 400W


FSP power supplies sold under their own brand always come in the typical FSP blue paired with a golden fan grille. The Blue Storm II is also one of the older power supplies we are testing today, but it still tries to carry the standard for FSP. We have seen new topologies from FSP that look very interesting and hope they bring out new versions rated at less than 1000W. The Blue Storm II uses a very successful design that FSP has sold to many companies during the past several years. This particular unit might be one of the last survivors of that topology.


This design became famous since it was one of the first ones with heatsinks based on just a piece of aluminum without any fins. The lack of fins should make it difficult for the heatsink to dissipate heat into the air effectively, but somehow it works okay so we don't want to bash too much on this issue. The main capacitor is made by Ostor, which is often used by FSP and Seasonic. The secondary caps are made by CapXon, which we also see often in FSP power supplies. The marking on the PCB shows that this same design is used from 250W up to 500W. It's too bad that we haven't seen a 250W unit with this design in the market; we know many people that would be very happy with such a unit.

As the Blue Storm II is one of FSP's retail products, they equipped it a little bit better than the OEM models. It comes with six Molex and three SATA connectors of decent length. The 24-pin, 4-pin, and 6-pin PEG connectors have a length of 40cm, which is still not very long but better than cables as short as the OEM version. In standard FSP fashion, the cables are sleeved in blue and the PCI-E cable harness is in red.

FSP OEM 300W - Performance FSP Blue Storm II 400W - Performance
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  • Origo - Monday, January 12, 2009 - link

    How can Silverstone Element ST40EF 400W get so good score on quietness and efficiency compared to Silverstone Element Plus ST50EF-Plus 500W?
    This (SPCR) review says Silverstone Element Plus ST50EF-Plus not that quiet or efficient:
    [url]http://www.silentpcreview.com/article670-page1.htm...[/url]
  • 7Enigma - Wednesday, January 7, 2009 - link

    Could you comment on this PSU? I know you have a 500 and 550w article coming up but an incredible deal ($25 after rebate) came up on this PSU and I'll snatch it up for my build if it's good.

    Thanks.
  • Markstar - Wednesday, January 7, 2009 - link

    As usual, thank you for your interesting review and the effort you surely put into it!

    Greetz from P3D!
  • yehuda - Sunday, January 4, 2009 - link

    This is the kind of article I like to keep in my favorites and refer people to.
  • Noya - Saturday, January 3, 2009 - link

    I skimmed through, but I didn't see what type of set-ups you'd recommend for this class of PSU.

    So, I'll post what I'm using with a Corsair vx450:
    Q8200 @ 3.3ghz (475x7)
    8gb Ballistix DDR2-800 cas4 @ 475mhz (4x2gb)
    Evga 9800gtx (stock clocked for now)
    Gigabyte P-45 UD3P
    3 x 7200rpm sata disks
    2 x DVD/RW
    3 x 120mm fans

    It's been running fine for almost a month now (thanks MS for the 30% eBay cashback lol). I previously used this vx450 in my first build (s939 Opteron/7600gt).
  • OddJensen - Monday, January 5, 2009 - link

    The VX450 is a pretty good PSU and under optimal conditions you can probably draw more than the max. rated wattage (450W @ 50C ambient). Though personally I like to go with a bit more headroom taking future upgrades into consideration.
  • kenyee - Friday, January 2, 2009 - link

    That's another way to group the power supplies.
    That's one reason I still use Enermax Liberty power supplies...they're a nice small size for HTPC's and the modular connectors are important when there isn't much space. Using this affects power efficiency which is probably why the highest efficiency ones don't use them...
  • proci - Thursday, January 1, 2009 - link

    its a very nice test, i like it. i miss some words from the ripple side, they could be useful to those, who don't want to analyze so many graphs.

    i have an FSP 500 GLN60 (active pfc, smooth oemgrey color:D), i wanted a BS2, but the two seems to be identical to me (ok, it only has one 6pin connector). and i'm out of connectors (6molex, 4sata... with 7 HDDs/opticals, 2 fan controllers and only one video card). so having many connectors is a good thing, although you can buy molex duplicators (only downside is they cost money). and its still more than enough to power my system (q6600@3.0, hd3870, lots of vents, hdds...).

    and most of the computers are fine with just 200-300W. its a shame, that there aren't that many good PSUs on the low edge, because having a monster of PSU means you will have bad efficiency in idle with most of the computers. ofc you can build a computer, which eats up 1000W, but besides skulltrail its hard, and mostly needs enthusiast end water cooling/compressor for cooling purposes.

    and having a good PSU is like having good safety in your car: you only notice it when it fails, but then it is already too late. and buying a noname PSU means that you playing russian roulette all the time...
  • Martin84a - Thursday, January 1, 2009 - link

    I find it weird people keep recommending Sea Sonic. I'm currently loojing for a new PSU in the 500-600watt range. I remember toms 24 hour PSU stress test, where Enermax, Zalman, Cooler Master and Silverstone where the last remaining, while Seasonic had failed with the rest.
    http://www.tomshardware.com/de/stresstest-netzteil...">http://www.tomshardware.com/de/stresste...etzteile...
    I just read Hardocps Seasonic S12II-500 watt psu review, and the transient load test showed awful results.
    http://hardocp.com/article.html?art=MTM2NCw3LCxoZW...">http://hardocp.com/article.html?art=MTM2NCw3LCxoZW...
    Think computer showed a lot of undervoltage ripple too, and on the 12v a lot of switching between overvoltage and undervoltage. That doesnt look good.
    http://www.thinkcomputers.org/index.php?x=reviews&...">http://www.thinkcomputers.org/index.php?x=reviews&...
    And i have read about the DOA Seasonics too, and the ones failing after some time...
    Seasonic also only provide 3 years of limited warrenty here like many other places, while a brand like Cooler master give 5 years, just like Corsair.

    Just makes you wonder.
    I think i'll go with an Enermax modu+ or pro+ this time..still not sure though.
  • sprockkets - Sunday, January 4, 2009 - link

    Hmmm... your first link is to the german side of Tom's, and while we can make out perhaps the SeaSonic PS failed, searching the English side for the same article does not yield a proper counterpart, and the article that comes close to it, is not even finished and broken. What does that say about Tom's Hardware?

    Your second link does show some iffy parts, but overall, they recommend the power supply and dismiss the transient load results as not important. Btw, you think a computer motherboard is going to fry because the 12v line varies 0.2v? 4.92 volts is bad? Those voltages can vary 10% on the 12v line and 5% on the others and meet Intel's ATX spec. Welcome to the real world of imperfection.

    Three years vs 5 years, so what? My FSP power supply in the thrid computer I've built in 2001 still runs fine, and it came with only a 1 year distributor warranty. In fact, only 1 out of 10+ FSP power supplies died, and it probably died because the power strip blew.

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