Conclusion

OCZ Z1000M - High +12V ripple, only three Molex connectors

As previously mentioned the Z-Series is an "old" 80Plus Gold PSU. The efficiency is still high at up to 91% while testing with 230VAC and 50% load. On 115VAC OCZ is right at the 87% requirement, so the 80Plus Gold certificate is appropriate. In addition 83% efficiency at low load is nice to see. Of course, the power factor could be higher but the more important noise level is what makes this PSU interesting for buyers. 18dBA is a good starting point and even at 110% OCZ is below 30dBA.

Points we have to criticize are the connector configuration with only 3x Molex on one cable and the high ripple and noise results on +5V and +12V. With ~47mV and ~118mV, both are close to the ATX limit, especially +12V. While this voltage quality is no glorious result the voltage regulation is tight overall.

OCZ gives users quite a few cable ties, two 8-pin connectors for the CPU (one with 4+4-pin), and six 6/8-pin PCIe connectors; nothing out of the ordinary for a 1000W PSU. In summary, the OCZ Z-Series 1000W is a reasonable power supply, especially if the price is right and if you're okay with the peripheral cables arrangement. Currently selling at Buy.com for $205, it's not a bad PSU but the high ripple isn't in the same league as other high-end PSUs.

AeroCool V12XT 1000W - Highest ripple and noise, worst voltage regulation

The overall quality of this V12XT model is perhaps the worst we've seen from an "upper-class" PSU. While +3.3V and +5V drop below -4% and +12V has an average regulation/voltage drop, every rail has problems with ripple and noise. +3.3V reached about 72mV, so 22mV or 44% over specification, and +12V is way out of spec with more than 163mV - even cheap PSUs have better results than this! The efficiency is okay for an 80Plus Bronze PSU with up to 88% at 230VAC, but the ~70% result at 10% load is sub-standard.

HEC is the ODM behind AeroCool and there are many similarities to the GX series from Cougar, but there are still many differences in the design and AeroCool has the older layout. There is one big main capacitor from Nippon Chemi-Con, two transformers and DC-to-DC on the secondary side.

With eight SATA connectors on two cables and not much in the way of package contents, it is hardly surprising that the price is relatively low. There are more than enough connectors to build a PC with several HDDs/SSDs, but for the price it needs to be better.

Cougar GX G1050 1050W - Robust and interesting case design, average efficiency

Cougar has a lot of experience in metal processing and is shows with their good looking GX series case. Unfortunately, a nice case isn't enough to make a good power supply. Ripple and noise is high on +5V, even if this should not be a real problem for modern PCs. +12V reached only about half of specification which is adequate and +3.3V has some buffers too.

Cougar has the same EMI filtering as AeroCool, but with an actual switcher and two main caps in the interleaved PF-preregulator. In the secondary circuit they are still using Taiwanese caps instead of Japanese ones. However, the design has output reserves like a Revolution85+ and the same robust look (with some Enermax-like cable ties in the delivery contents). Apart from that the efficiency is extremely low at 10% load. The G1050 also manages near silence at low loads.

A nice cable sleeving and a very long cable with CPU connectors are uncommon features. Certainly other manufacturers provide good sleeving, but this one looks special. The six 6/8-pin PCIe are an usual configuration but enough for triple SLI setups.

Cooler Master Silent Pro Gold 1200W - Short cables, not particularly silent

The Silent Pro series has flat cables like Corsair but very short cables and just four HDD connectors. With just 70cm for the SATA cables and up to 60cm for Molex, Cooler Master forfeits a chance to compensate for the high ripple and noise results. As expected this PSU has eight PCIe connectors for triple-SLI or quad-CrossFire.

We measured nearly 100mV ripple on the +12V rails and a little bit too much on +5V, giving us a sense of déjà vu. Cooler Master has the same disadvantages as the OCZ, but in this case there is also the noisy fan. Starting at 20dBA and ramping up to the highest levels of today's five tested power supplies, the Silent Pro is definitely a misnomer. At high load it is as loud as the old PC Power and Cooling Turbo Cool and much louder thant the previously tested Silent Pro 1000W. The effect of the L-shapped heatsinks is vanishingly low and they need more than moderate fan speeds for cooling.

Other aspects aren't quite so bad, though. Most caps are from Japan, particularly the ones on the secondary side. Moreover Cooler Master has DC-to-DC and a very good soldering quality. The filtering behind the AC inlet does look chaotic, however. All in all the Silent Pro Gold can't live up to its name because it is simply impossible to use the same fan control as the smaller models to reach acceptable temperatures. Cooler Master should use another name for their high wattage PSUs - or come up with a better design.

Antec High Current Pro 1200W - Best quality, extra modular cables, high price

Like Cooler Master Antec offers 8x PCIe connectors, but they provide longer cables and all the connectors have 6/8 pins. The HCP-1200 has many peripheral connectors, more than you can actually use in fact, but that provides users some flexibility in determining how to set up their systems. The 65cm 24-pin and CPU cables are nice and long as well, making this a good PSU for larger cases

Delta Electronics is the ODM behind this PSU. Their design has two main PCBs with a heavy duty 80mm fan providing cooling. Interesting to note is that the smaller fan stays below 19dBA through 50% load. Antec uses Japanese capacitors only (Nippon Chemi-Con and Rubycon) and four large main caps. This is on of the highest quality builds we've seen!

Our test Antec PSU didn't quite make it to 80Plus Gold efficiency levels on 115VAC, and +3.3V could be regulated better. Nevertheless, the HCP-1200 is impressive as it delivers excellent (i.e. low) ripple and noise results. +12V has a maximum ripple of 20mV, and +3.3V is even better. A generally quiet fan combined with clean voltages makes the Antec High Current Pro a good choice for enthusiasts. Our only word of caution is that you can only use five cables for peripherals, leaving you with a couple extras; you'll have to decide if that's a problem.

Closing remarks

We tested five high-end PSUs ranging from 1000W to 1200W, and we encountered a few common problems. A new topology and high wattages require manufacturers to put more effort into quality control, but above all they need to take more time. At the moment many manufactures want to reach 80Plus Gold faster than the competition, which is why we're seeing problems with the designs (e.g. high ripple and noise). Because they're in such a rush, they don't have time to correct their mistakes, so we end up with less desirable high-end PSUs. There's definitely room for improvement.

The Antec High Current Pro 1200W is one of the PSUs that delivers better results in all the areas that matter, and it's easily the best product in this roundup. It's not perfect, but in the end we have to praise the stellar voltage quality. We're giving them a Silver rather than Gold for a couple reasons; first and foremost, the price is quite high at $300 online. The second reason is a bit cheeky: our test sample managed to reach only 89.62% efficiency during 50% load, coming in just shy of an official 80Plus Gold level; likewise, we feel the HCP-1200 falls just shy of being the best in every area so a Silver Editors' Choice is fitting. There's also still that question of whether you need a 1200W PSU; for 99.9% of users, the answer is no, but there are enthusiasts out there running three or four GPUs with four or more hard drives, so if you fall into that category this is the best high-wattage PSU we've tested so far.

Antec HCP-1200 Noise, Efficiency, and PFC
Comments Locked

44 Comments

View All Comments

  • dubyadubya - Friday, December 10, 2010 - link

    Corsair supplies are great and should have been included in any review. You make it sound like Corsair makes their own supplies but they don't. The AX series is made by Seasonic and based on the X series. Their other supplies are made either by CWT or Seasonic. Both of which make great supplies. So in reality any PSU comparison review must include supplies built by Seasonic and CWT.
  • scook9 - Friday, December 10, 2010 - link

    Actually the AX1200 that is the king of the desktop power supplies right now is made by Flextronics. Corsair uses 2 different OEMs in their AX line up. This is why the AX1200 is the only model from the AX line I would consider. I already have a HX850 so would gain next to nothing with a AX850
  • brotj7 - Friday, December 10, 2010 - link

    If a midtier review is being considered, please include some push/pull designs, or at least some high quality PSU's with an open grate in the front, and a fan in the back. Some of us are stuck with cases with wind tunnels like an antec p180 and the like, these do not lend well to a top/bottom mounted fan.
  • Wander7 - Friday, December 10, 2010 - link

    I've had 2 Antec Neos die on me the last three years. Hope no one else has my luck
  • vol7ron - Friday, December 10, 2010 - link

    Cougar has a CMX 1000w PSU, does anyone know how this compares to the GX 1050?
  • Martin Kaffei - Monday, December 13, 2010 - link

    It's a little bit worse.

    Same fan, less 8-pin PCIe connectors, less efficiency.
  • TechieFan - Saturday, December 11, 2010 - link

    When you perform a more thorough review, please include the "Thermaltake ToughPower 80 Plus Power Supply". I just purchased one and would love to know how it stacks up vs. the competition.

    I'd also appreciate a bit more detail regarding the comment that a 1200 is overkill for most people. While I'm sure that's true, if you run some of the powersupply estimators availble online it's somewhat surprising how much power they suggest (I run two GTX 580's (not 3) to my HP ZR30W and they suggested a 1075 psu minimum with my setup.)
  • METALMORPHASIS - Sunday, December 12, 2010 - link

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N8...

    I don't need anything bigger to start my car with yet.
    And thats more than enough for my rig today.
  • JimDDuncan - Monday, December 13, 2010 - link

    Alot of people asked for ax1200 for good reason. Jonnyguru has a very complete test of this psu. It is rated very high on efficiency. No mention of it there but more than a few buyer reviews complain of coil whine. There is also a youtube vid displaying this. Still my choice and arrives tomorrow. Btw another site successfully ran four gtx 480s on it. Impressive but point of diminishing returns. Good luck with your choices. If this post stays up I will continue to visit this site. New here.
  • Sabresiberian - Wednesday, December 15, 2010 - link

    Anandtech has run tests on mainstream PSUs recently - and runs more of them than on these kinds of PSUs. As far as people like you it's an obvious waste of time anyway, I doubt you'd actually read the articles if you found them.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now