Conclusion

Cooler Master delivers a PSU that has appropriate features and worthy electronics for the intended market. The MSRP is moderately high at the moment, but online pricing is much better (see below). The cooling could be a lot quieter, especially considering the "Silent Pro" name, and the fan could be better as well, but most of the results in our load tests are decent.

 

The Silent Pro M1000 scores with its anti-vibration frames and an adequate number of PCIe connectors. A 5-year of warranty isn't out of the norm, especially because the product has to be registered online, but it's still better than some manufacturers. A lot depends on the quality of the service so the duration of warranty should not be the characteristic feature for purchase decisions.

The 60cm and 65cm lengths on the 24-pin and 4+4pin motherboard cables are very long, but we would have expected an additional 4-pin and 8-pin connector. Cooler Master strongly focuses on a high-end gaming PC with an 8-pin connector. But besides that there are motherboards and CPUs that need more than a single mainboard connector. In return, enough peripheral ports are present and the asynchronous array of SATA connectors considers a multitude of positions for hard drives and other peripherals. The floppy connector is realized by an adapter for those that still need such a device, which is a reasonable approach. The flat connection cables are beneficial as they are more flexible, but they offer no measurable advantage for airflow.

Inside the PSU the workmanship is satisfactory. Wherever needed, parts are insulated. The power supply is sensibly refined with a selected choice of components and only the PFC-choke could be affixed better. Otherwise the filtering stages are well equipped. This applies particularly to the capacitors as Cooler Master not only uses a good main capacitor, but good secondary ones as well. The manufacturer does not just look at details, but pays attention to the whole package. For example there are not only 105°C-capacitors used, but also with decent characteristics.

Nevertheless these are not the top-of-the-line components, which helps bring the price down to $164 online at the time of writing. Especially at low load the fan should be regulated in smaller steps, as the fan speed stays on the same level from 10% to 50% load. The sleeve bearing fan is a standard (i.e. mediocre) model, while most manufactures use their own specialized fans. Cooler Master surely could find a better fan from other suppliers.

Despite a few nitpicks, we can't criticize the measurement results. +5V ideally should not drop this far, but is still well within the range of the specification. In addition a modern system does not use the +5V rail to this extent and the drop was recorded at an overload situation. +3.3V drops no more than -1.5% and +12V is very constant as well. On the +12V rail the highest ripple spike was recorded, but overall the Silent Pro convinces. Even Enermax reaches nearly 60mV with their Pro/Modu87+, so the result is fine here. The competition is not that fierce in the matter of voltage quality. Especially at +3.3V and +5V single-digit or lower double-digit measurements are very hard to beat.

The efficiency (87 %) may not be the best, but is well within the promised level. Furthermore an efficiency of 82% at 10% load (scarcely 100w) is above the average level of previously tested power supplies. The power factor reaches 0.98 at 230VAC, which means minimal phase shifting. There isn't much missing to keep the M1000 from being the best ATX power supply in its price range, but unfortunately the PSU isn't very Silent (Pro).

Ripple & Noise
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  • FinBenton - Monday, September 6, 2010 - link

    I have this PSU, it has been working ok but computer cannot go to sleep with this psu and fan is definitely audible even when no stress on hardware.
  • Beenthere - Monday, September 6, 2010 - link

    Don't care for the flat cables at all. They are a PITA and obstruct airflow. With quiet fans available there is little need for noise these days.
  • hsew - Monday, September 6, 2010 - link

    It's too bad we don't see more PSU reviews from this site more often. This is one of the few sites that properly tests PSUs.
  • redwolfe98 - Tuesday, September 7, 2010 - link

    every review of a "cooler master" power supply that i read mentions some defect..

    having half of the air-intake blocked is stupid..
  • pkoi - Tuesday, September 7, 2010 - link

    Heatsinks have way too little surface area.
  • pkoi - Tuesday, September 7, 2010 - link

    What a piece of S...
  • Imagginer - Tuesday, September 7, 2010 - link

    Power Supplies this strong are made for CF and SLI gymnastics, right? So if you've got 2 or 3 high end graphic cards stacked how are you going to cool them? Passively?....I don't think so. Now, I dont know how load those coolers are going to be but one can bet they're gonna be loader than 20dba......so this fuss about 20dba being too load is irrelevant or should we say ridiculous...
    If you're building audio workstation...that's another story....but you're not gonna need 1000W, thats for sure...
  • Imagginer - Tuesday, September 7, 2010 - link

    PS.

    Who needs 1000W PS anyway.... 99,9999% of people get nothing with it but bragging rights...
    My 625W Enermax is more than I will ever need and even with that I often ask myself if I ever am gonna need that much power.... taking into consideration that my i7 920 and HD 4870 are not exactly 'power saving components'....
  • jdietz - Tuesday, September 7, 2010 - link

    Agreed. 1kW is far too much for most PCs. One of my PCs has 380W PS and the other has 330W PS. Both have a video card installed. If you have only one video card (read: 90% of PC owners), you don't need over 350W.
  • Martin Kaffei - Tuesday, September 7, 2010 - link

    Hi,
    for my next review I got an Antec Earth Watts Green 380W. Hope, you'll like it.

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