Cables and Connectors

A small rubber ring protects the outgoing cables from damage caused by rubbing against the casing. Except for the 24pin-cable, all of he cables are unsleeved, which again keeps costs down. A few cable ties help keep the cables somewhat organized. If you're used to higher end PSUs, the cabling on the EarthWatts Green looks like a throwback to older/cheaper designs, but the internals are still modern.

Cables and Connectors
Fixed Main 24-pin 50 cm
ATX12V/EPS12V 4+4-pin 50 cm
PCIe 1x 6-pin 50 cm
Peripheral 3x PATA 50-80 cm + 1x Floppy 95 cm
3x SATA 50-80 cm / 2x SATA 50-65 cm + 1x PATA 80 cm

The number of connectors is adequate for the PSU capacity. Five SATA and four PATA plugs are enough for the HDDs and other peripheral hardware of most systems. The 24-pin, 4+4-pin ATX12V and 6-pin PCIe-cords have a length of 50 cm. This is average and we have seen longer cables, but this PSU will mainly be used in Mid- or Mini-Towers.

Package Contents Internals
Comments Locked

64 Comments

View All Comments

  • decto - Monday, October 11, 2010 - link

    I've used and installed many of the older EA 380 units which are also 80+ rated and now a couple of these.

    You can power a lot with them, a 3Ghz Q6600 and power sucking Radeon HD2900 or how about Q6600 and 8800GTS G92 512MB SLI. Both ran fine for regular extended gaming sessions.

    I currently have one in an X2 5000 home server with a nvidia 7025 itx mainboard. Consumption is around 40W at idle so a quick calculation later (77% net @ 38W) and It's £7 ukp ($11 usd) per year of waste electricity for 24 / 7 / 365 operation.

    While pico PSU and mini itx can be more efficent, the cost of the hardware negates the energy savings over a typical system lifetime.

    As per a previous post, it would be good to see an article for low power systems <50W and <100W as more of us are using a purpose built 'efficient' home server or media centre and the data to make environmental and TCO based buying decisions is very hard to find.

    Congratulation on the real world review.

    More please.
  • Spazweasel - Thursday, October 14, 2010 - link

    Using the power supply calculator at http://extreme.outervision.com/PSUEngine with a typical moderate gaming build:

    Clarkdale i5 650 with a modest overclock (3.6ghz, 1.33v vcore)
    4gb DDR3 RAM (2x 2gb)
    GTX 460 1gb (single card)
    1 SATA hard drive
    1 DVD-RW
    Using on-board audio
    1 additional 120mm cooling fan
    25% additional capacitor aging factor

    Their recommended power supply? 392 watts.

    Yeah. This power supply for a moderate gaming rig is JUST FINE. If you're running a high-end system, sure, get that 750w unit. But recognize that even among gamers, that's hardly the typical build. And really, this "alpha nerd" BS where people get sneered at because they're not running water-cooled +50% overclocks with quad-SLI video subsystems... we can do without that. Nice system, sure, but the degree to which someone gets to look down their nose at someone else isn't tied to FSB speed.
  • Matias - Wednesday, December 7, 2011 - link

    For the record, this Antec Earthwatts 380D PSU is enough to power my overclocked i5 2500K, EVGA GTX 460 1Gb FPB, SSD, HDD, DVD-ROM and PCI soundcard. Runs Skyrim just fine.
    The video card requires 24A and this PSU gives up to 25A per rail before the OCP protecion kicks in.
    Sure, no headroom whatsoever, but these current draws are already worst case cenario, so I guess there is no need for headroom.
  • mrawesome421 - Friday, May 17, 2013 - link

    I don't know what I am more impressed with. This PSU or this review. Really, terrific job here.

    Great unit too. I use this to run my old XP box and its quite, reliable and I actually like the green paint job. I would totally buy this thing again for a future HTPC build. In fact, I know I will.

    Great review man. Thanks.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now