Conclusion

ATX PSUs were the focus of R&D for decades while, at the same time, SFX designs were hardly available at all. This led to a massive performance gap between ATX and SFX units, as the latter started appealing to home users and gamers just a few years ago. Only a couple of years ago, the power quality of SFX units still was rather poor. The SilverStone SX700-LPT and, later on, the Enermax Revolution SFX 650W were the first SFX units that gave us performance figures on par with high-performance ATX units.

SilverStone is a company strongly focused on the R&D of small form factor cases (SFF), systems, and other related parts. They have several compact cases and products designed for high-end living room systems, including designs that were designed with gamers in mind. Therefore, their efforts to market the very best SFX PSUs available are not unfounded.

The SX800-LTI not only brings a record-high power output for an SFX-L design, but also is even further improved, with exceptional energy conversion efficiency and better power output quality than its predecessors. Note that the power quality is still not on par with that of top-tier ATX PSUs and it definitely is much louder than any equally powerful ATX design, but it would unquestionably be unfair to compare the SX800-LTI to any ATX unit. As far as SFX/SFX-L designs go, the SX800-LTI has the best overall performance that we have encountered to this date.

The extra length of the SX800-LTI makes it incompatible with most SFX-compliant cases. According to their compatibility charts, even most of SilverStone’s own cases are incompatible with this PSU. Its short wires make it incompatible with ATX-compliant cases as well, plus there really is no reason to purchase such an expensive SFX-L unit if one is planning to use an ATX-compliant case, as ATX PSUs are significantly less expensive and there is a much wider selection available. That the SX800-LTI is fully modular and there are adapters/cable sets available to allow its installation in an ATX case is a boon, but only for those that, for any given reason, may have to switch from their SFX-based system to an ATX-based system in the future.

The only real problem with this unit is that it lacks purpose. The SX800-LTI has only one CPU/EPS 8-pin connector, meaning that it cannot be used to power top-tier motherboards that have two 8-pin connectors, which is reasonable considering that current designs of such motherboards are all but impossible to fit inside SFX-compliant cases anyway. That leaves only the GPU(s) as the major load of the system. The power output and class of the SX800-LTI suggest that it needs at least two GPUs to even reach efficient loading levels. The only configuration that could bring the PSU’s loading up to 50-55% is that of SilverStone’s only compatible case, the RVZ02/ML08, with an NVIDIA TITAN V or AMD VEGA 64 installed. When moving to Micro-ATX motherboards with two PCIe ×16 slots, such as the Asus ROG Strix Z270G, cases that are roomy enough to house two full-size graphics cards also support ATX PSUs, so the SX800-LTI is an unappealing option. Only a SFX-compliant case designed for high-end Micro ATX motherboards is the natural habitat of the SX800-LTI, and there just are not many (if any) available at this time.

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  • masteraleph - Friday, January 19, 2018 - link

    1) It’s not large, but there is an enthusiast SFF market. ASRock is doing an mATX threadripper board and has an mITX x299 board, and there’s a lot of talk about bifurcation in the enthusiast sff community right now.

    2) SilverStone is working on a completely passive SFX-L psu at 400w using this psu as the base.
  • cbm80 - Friday, January 19, 2018 - link

    Whatever happened to nice PSU cables? 10 years ago even cheap PSUs used beautifully sleeved cables, now even pricey PSUs have downgraded to this ribbon crap.
  • meacupla - Saturday, January 20, 2018 - link

    Ribbon cables are easier to work with, especially in tight places.
    Bundle sleeved cables add a lot of bulk to the cable ends and are unsuitable for SFF.
  • sharath.naik - Monday, February 26, 2018 - link

    I have to correct the final conclusion in the article. I have this psu driving, a dual socket motherboard, 2 xeon v4 18 cores. 8 memory slots , with gtx 1080t. All in core g3 sfx case with additional holes drilled for eatx motherboard. In short, you can use a splitter for the 8 pin cpu cable to run dual socket motherboard.
  • Ninjawithagun - Thursday, November 12, 2020 - link

    And now, two years later, this PSU is the perfect solution for powering my mini-ITX gaming system inside the small form factor Nano S case. I'm running a 9900K, 16GB 4233Mhz DDR4, Samsung 950 Pro NVMe SSD, and EVGA RTX3080 FTW3 Ultra. The RTX3080 alone uses 450W (thanks to EVGA's latest BIOS update), so if anything I'm thinking I might actually have to upgrade the power supply if I so choose to overclock the CPU. Needless to say, no other SFX-L power supply is available today that can do what the Silverstone LTi could do two years ago ;-)

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