Internals


Opening the power supply, we are greeted with a nicely arranged interior. The filtering stage is actually located on an extra PCB directly in front of exhaust area (at the right in the above image). A nice detail is that the small PCB is not the same length/height as the main PCB; this means that air will be able to circulate under the main PCB and potentially provide better cooling. The design also means that unlike other designs (i.e. the Zippy Serene), no components are hindering air from coming through, potentially causing some turbulence.



The PFC stage contains the main cap from Hitachi rated at 390µF and 400V. The rectifier bridge also gets an extra little golden heatsink.




The secondary side looks a little crowded, which is a pretty common trait with many other power supplies as well. Most of the cables block the airflow, limiting the ability of the fan to cool components in this area.



All the safety features are supplied by a small chip sitting on a PCB near the cables; this chip is from the Taiwanese company Silicon Touch Technologies, which is the same as most other Enermax PSUs. It works fine and we haven't encountered problems with it so far.

Cables, Connectors, and Fan Test Setup and DC Outputs
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  • HaZaRd2K6 - Tuesday, September 11, 2007 - link

    I know they make the Corsair 620HX (which I own; great PSU), but I thought PCP&C manufactured their own... Speaking of which, will we be seeing a review of any Corsair PSUs coming up? They're hot sellers at work, and I'd like to see how they stack up stats-wise to some of the others on here so far.
  • n0nsense - Tuesday, September 11, 2007 - link

    Good job with this review, guys.
    But have to disagree with you. 4/8 and 24 pin cables are short. It's enough for most of users, but it will be impossible to use it with Enermax CS-718 (I'm a happy owner of this one) case or any other case where CPU socket is not close to PSU. Strange thing. After all, it's the same company.

    What is really missing for comparison, is Corsair HX620. Which i believe is best choice for this class.

    As for Infinity, efficient, but noisy.

  • n0nsense - Tuesday, September 11, 2007 - link

    Good job with this review, guys.
    But have to disagree with you. 4/8 and 24 pin cables are short. It's enough for most of users, but it will be impossible to use it with Enermax CS-718 (I'm a happy owner of this one) case or any other case where CPU socket is not close to PSU. Strange thing. After all, it's the same company.

    What is really missing for comparison, is Corsair HX620. Which i believe is best choice for this class.

    As for Infinity, efficient, but noisy.

  • Jodiuh - Tuesday, September 11, 2007 - link

    I'm not sure the exact length of the PC P&C 610's 4/8 and 24 pin cables, but it's a real close fit for my Stacker going up from the bottom, behind the mobo tray, back through a hole I cut out, and into the plug. The PC P&C 750 Quad/Xfire reviewed recently has 45CM cables as opposed to the Enermax's 50CM. Still, I think it'd be nice to have some 75CM cables for that extra wiring origami one might need inside a bigger case like the Lian Li 2100's and such.
  • n0nsense - Wednesday, September 12, 2007 - link

    It must.
    http://rusisrael.com/albums/pic/o/00/00/28/2859.jp...">http://rusisrael.com/albums/pic/o/00/00/28/2859.jp...
    Look at the picture. cables have to go from the top most to the bottom.
    This is my old config which was running with Thermaltake 470 PSU (can't remember the exact model). But when I replaced MoBo with Asus P5N32-E SLI, i found it impossible to connect 4/8 pin cable. It was to short. My preferred PSU (Corsair's HX620) has 19" (~50cm) 4/8pin cable and i needed to do some customization to extent the cables.
  • n0nsense - Wednesday, September 12, 2007 - link

    It must.
    http://rusisrael.com/albums/pic/o/00/00/28/2859.jp...">http://rusisrael.com/albums/pic/o/00/00/28/2859.jp...
    Look at the picture. cables have to go from the top most to the bottom.
    This is my old config which was running with Thermaltake 470 PSU (can't remember the exact model). But when I replaced MoBo with Asus P5N32-E SLI, i found it impossible to connect 4/8 pin cable. It was to short. My preferred PSU (Corsair's HX620) has 19" (~50cm) 4/8pin cable and i needed to do some customization to extent the cables.
  • n0nsense - Wednesday, September 12, 2007 - link

    It must.
    http://rusisrael.com/albums/pic/o/00/00/28/2859.jp...">http://rusisrael.com/albums/pic/o/00/00/28/2859.jp...
    Look at the picture. cables have to go from the top most to the bottom.
    This is my old config which was running with Thermaltake 470 PSU (can't remember the exact model). But when I replaced MoBo with Asus P5N32-E SLI, i found it impossible to connect 4/8 pin cable. It was to short. My preferred PSU (Corsair's HX620) has 19" (~50cm) 4/8pin cable and i needed to do some customization to extent the cables.
  • JEDIYoda - Tuesday, September 11, 2007 - link

    Nice review!
    Considering I have thought the Infinity line was NOT that good compared to other brands comperable PSU`s!!

    It appears as if Enermax did something right!!

    very nice review!!
  • retrospooty - Tuesday, September 11, 2007 - link

    Yup, Enermax has been at or near the top for years. My last 2 PS were Enermax. I just got this very model the Infiniti 650 on Sept. 1st for $163.99 including shipping at ewiz.com. Very nice PS.
  • retrospooty - Tuesday, September 11, 2007 - link

    Also... about hte noise. I run a C2D at 4ghz and an 8800GTX overclokced as well all watercooled in Arizona, ambient temps are a warm 82f in my house. No noise at all coming from the PS after hours of load.

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