Package Contents, Power Rating, and Fan

The contents in the package are very generous. Besides the so-called "CordGuard" that secures the power cord, users get some Enermax cable ties, an Enermax sticker, a user manual, and the modular cables in a separate bag. Features of the product include the 80 Plus Platinum certificate, a 5 year warranty, the improved resonant converter, and other technical refinements; we'll cover those in more detail later. There is also a "HeatGuard", which is nothing more than a temperature monitor that will continue to cool the PSU after you shut off the PC/PSU (if necessary).

According to the label the PSU has four +12V outputs rated at 25A each, which together can provide almost the entire power output (744W). Both +3.3V and +5V are specified at 24A. Those outputs can provide up to 120W, which is slightly lower than the values from most power supplies in this performance class but typically more than sufficient for modern PCs. The +5VSB at 3A is also relatively strong.

Enermax relies on its own high-quality Twister fan for cooling, with the model number EA142512W-OAB. This one has seven transparent fan blades and is based on Enermax's "Twister Bearing". The fan is rated at just 0.15A current, which is rather moderate. The fan runs at low speeds ranging from 300 to 1000RPM. Well, at least that applies to the fan in Platimax models below 1000W. Thanks to some patents, the fan has a 13.9cm diameter, but it's basically a 140mm fan.

Introducing the Enermax Platimax 750W External Impressions and Cable Configuration
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  • colonelciller - Friday, February 10, 2012 - link

    call me a newb... but why would I want a power supply such as this?

    honest question. Won't other computer components will be designed around more standard power supply output characteristics anyway?
  • wifiwolf - Friday, February 10, 2012 - link

    PSU is one of the most important components.
    You don't want PSU to fail on you ever.
    It starts with spiky stability and in time components start failing and you never relate it directly to power supply until you monitor those voltages.
    Probably everyone looking at this article gone through that until they wised up.
    When you just use Word and Excel on your computer, you probably survive with system hanging once a month in a stable environment. But when you push a bit harder on your system, sometimes the result can be a computer burning literally.
  • medi01 - Sunday, February 12, 2012 - link

    Except that more efficient PSU that race for higher numbers tend to be much more complex, which definitely does NOT help with reliability. (at least as far as my personal experience with Enermax Modu 82+ goes, broke within first 2 month, occasional to frequent reboots 2 years later =/)
  • Iketh - Friday, February 10, 2012 - link

    LOL NOOB

    what wifiwolf said are the main reasons, but high quality power supplies also lower power bills considerably on high-watt systems (crossfire/sli/overclocking etc...)

    the 2 rules of thumb when building your own system is 1) don't skimp on powersupply 2) don't skimp on motherboard. You can skimp on CPU/RAM and everything else because you can make adjustments on those components so that they work, as in megahertz or RAM timings and the voltages to those components, but you can't adjust how capacitors on motherboards and powersupplies deliver said power.

    you have to experience the headaches associated with cheap power supplies before you completely understand.
  • bji - Saturday, February 11, 2012 - link

    False dilemma.

    The choice is not only between this power supply and "cheap power supplies".

    There are also power supplies at 1/2 the cost of this one that would likely have performance and reliability that would be so similar as to, for most people, be indistinguishable.

    Therefore the question of, why would this power supply be a better choice than a good quality power supply that is much less expensive, is a valid question and not one that should be so easily dismissed.

    I paid something like $130 for a Seasonic 650 Watt gold power supply and I am not sure what I'd really be getting with this Enermax supply that is tangibly different.
  • bji - Saturday, February 11, 2012 - link

    Just checked my newegg order history; I actually paid $120 with free shipping in October 2010 for a Seasonic X650 Gold. It is 1% - 2% less efficient than this Enermax.

    Let me reiterate that I think it's valid to question the value of this power supply rather than dismissing the question outright.
  • Iketh - Saturday, February 11, 2012 - link

    Well I should have mentioned that I'm not endorcing this power supply whatsoever, just answering his question about "standard" vs good.

    Minimum quality I use in my own systems is Antec 80-plus bronze.
  • beginner99 - Saturday, February 11, 2012 - link

    I good power supply is of course important but its like with CPUs. The top notch model i overpriced compared to what it offers. So yeah, a 120$ Seasonic Gold sure is better value for most people assuming they last the same time (that's the big question as a power supply usually is re-used for the next build).
  • cfaalm - Saturday, February 11, 2012 - link

    I guess it's still like what wifiwolf said still. It depends on how hard you think you're going to drive your system. Hardly any of the manufacturers like Asus, Dell or Acer are going to bother with these PSUs. They can settle for anything that goes up to 75% efficiency on 50% load. If you build your own just for fun but still don't drive it very hard, you'll be OK with a "standard" PSU.

    For everyone else, serious OCing, gaming, heavy duty video and audio etc. you don't want to skimp on the PSU as you know you'll be asking for the last drop of CPU/GPU power your system can muster.
  • just4U - Sunday, February 12, 2012 - link

    I think the days of the cheap PSU (save maybe for OEMs) is gone. Even $50 power supplies are fairly decent these days.

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