External Impressions, Cables, and Connectors

Other than the change in color, the top of the casing looks exactly like the one from the X-1000 and X-1250. All the sides are very thick and even after opening the chassis we couldn't find any sharp-edged parts. One side shows the name of the series, and the opposite side has the power output label. On the rear of the PSU, next to the power input is a large power switch, occupying more than its fair share of space and taking away a bit of area that would otherwise be used for the ventilation holes.

At the front we find that all the modular plugs are uniform in color. The top right socket can be used either for a PCIe or for a CPU connector. When in doubt, the customer must choose one of the two variants, but the PCIe connector can also be connected in the bottom row. Three more PCIe plugs are available, though only two of them are required for the 860W model (e.g. there are only two PCIe cable harnesses).

Worth note is that at 19cm the body is relatively long, but it's not surprisingly long for a modular PSU in this power class. The product wasn't designed for HTPCs so the length shouldn't be a point of criticism. However, you'll want to ensure your intended case has enough room for the PSU.

Cables and Connectors

 

Main 1x 24-pin (60cm) modular
ATX12V/EPS12V 4+4-pin (65cm)
8-pin (65cm) all modular
PCIe 2x 6/8-pin (60cm)
2x 6/8-pin (60cm) all modular
Peripheral 3x SATA (55, 70, 85cm)
3x SATA (55, 70, 85cm)
3x SATA (55, 70, 85cm)
2x SATA (35, 50cm) all modular
3x Molex (55, 70, 85cm)
3x Molex (55, 70, 85cm)
2x Molex (35, 50cm) all modular

In total there are eleven SATA connectors on four separate harnesses, which is above average. The eight Molex connectors are common for this performance category. Note that the connector panel of the PSU only supports using six total harnesses, so you'll have to either skip out on one SATA harness or one of the Molex harnesses. Apart from the two slightly shorter peripheral cables it would have been nice to get different lengths for the remaining SATA and Molex cables.

As noted above the upper socket can be used for graphics cards or the CPU. At up to 85cm long, the peripheral cables should work in nearly all cases, while the mainboard and PCIe plugs reach 60-65cm. The 24-pin plug is connected to the bottom row (with 12 volt) and the middle row as well.

The cable sleeving is very good and relatively opaque, but ends just before the plug sockets, which doesn't look as good as it could. That's apparently the price one must pay for the full modular connector system; perhaps flat cables would be a better solution here. But this is a matter of taste. As always the electronics is much more important for us.

Delivery Contents, Power Rating and Fan Internals and Electronics
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  • Martin Kaffei - Friday, February 24, 2012 - link

    Tcha, that's one disadvantage of those full modular PSUs.
    I always forget the cables. I'm sorry.
  • Cobra Commander - Friday, February 24, 2012 - link

    Displeased with the subjective noise levels - they're 100% meaningless to me.
    Create a standard on how Anandtech wishes to objectively-benchmark PSU noise and stick to it, please.
  • Oxford Guy - Saturday, February 25, 2012 - link

    Agreed.

    The chart says "strong fan noise" and then the article's body text talks about how very quiet it is at high load.

    ? ? ?
  • vicbee - Friday, February 24, 2012 - link

    What?!? They didn't get your Platinum Award?!? how disappointing...
  • rtothedizzy - Friday, February 24, 2012 - link

    I think you might have overstated your conclusion a bit.

    While this is a great power supply it's hard to argue that it is superior to its 1000W big brother which (I believe) matches this one in all the efficiency, regulation, and noise benchmarks and adds another 140W.

    The only way I can see you claiming this one is better is maybe a price/W metric or whenever you wrote this article you weren't aware of the 1000W version.
  • just4U - Friday, February 24, 2012 - link

    Martin,

    How about some pictures of the cables please. These things are important to many of us as we like to see what they look like for case work arounds asthetics, what type of ribbons their using or sleeving etc.

    TY!
  • Martin Kaffei - Saturday, February 25, 2012 - link

    Done.

    There will be more pictures next week. The 24-pin cable is probably a bad example, but this was the only picture I made. The peripheral cables are more opaque.
  • tzhu07 - Friday, February 24, 2012 - link

    I'm currently on a SeaSonic X750. I like the hybrid fan mode. Keeps things quiet when I'm not doing much.
  • Nfarce - Friday, February 24, 2012 - link

    I've got a SS 620W Bronze running an older now-backup gaming rig and it's been flawless for over two years (overclocked E8400, SLI'd o/c GTX 275s). However, the reviews of the 1000W version of this PS on NewEgg are a little disconcerting with a 25% failure/DOA rate - especially at this level of supposed quality (and price).
  • AssBall - Friday, February 24, 2012 - link

    $220... ouch. But I guess if you need the best, you pay for it.

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