Voltage Regulation

+3.3V Regulation/Ripple and Noise
Load Voltage
5% +2.72% (5mV)
10% +2.72% (7mV)
20% +2.42% (11mV)
50% +2.12% (12mV)
80% +1.52% (13mV)
100% +1.52% (15mV)
110% +1.21% (19mV)
Crossload +12V max. +3.03%
Crossload +3.3V/+5V max. +0.30%

 

+5V Regulation/Ripple and Noise
Load Voltage
5% +3.40% (4mV)
10% +3.40% (3mV)
20% +3.40% (7mV)
50% +3.00% (10mV)
80% +2.60% (12mV)
100% +2.40% (14mV)
110% +2.00% (18mV)
Crossload +12V max. +3.20%
Crossload +3.3V/+5V max. -0.20%

 

+12V Regulation (Worst Ouput)/Ripple and Noise (Worst Output)
Load Voltage
5% +2.25% (7mV)
10% +2.08% (11mV)
20% +1.92% (29mV)
50% +1.58% (41mV)
80% +1.25% (52mV)
100% +0.92% (60mV)
110% +0.75% (64mV)
Crossload +12V max. +1.08%
Crossload +3.3V/+5V max. -0.17%

Noise Levels

Loudness (subjective)
Load Opinion
5% audible fan rotation
10% audible fan rotation
20% audible fan rotation
50% audible fan rotation and choke chirping
80% audible fan rotation and choke chirping
100% strong fan noise and choke chirping
110% strong fan noise and choke chirping

Efficiency and PFC

Efficiency and Power Factor 230 VAC
Load Efficiency PFC
5% 69.58% 0.862
10% 77.98% 0.924
20% 84.63% 0.948
50% 87.17% 0.959
80% 85.93% 0.965
100% 85.86% 0.967
110% 85.32% 0.968

 

Efficiency and Power Factor 115 VAC
Load Efficiency PFC
5% 67.21% 0.892
10% 76.57% 0.954
20% 84.23% 0.962
50% 85.90% 0.969
80% 83.76% 0.978
100% 82.92% 0.989
110% 82.58% 0.993

The +12V voltage regulation is acceptable, while the weaker ouputs start too high. Nevertheless, all of the voltages are well within the ATX specification. Moreover there is hardly any ripple or noise on the smaller outputs +5V and +3.3V. They're always under 20mV and there are no remarkable spikes or transients. There's definitely some nice work here. The power factor is satisfying as well, staying above 0.862.  Especially during low load efficiency could be much higher but that's OK for an 80Plus Bronze PSU.

Internals and Electronics Conclusion
Comments Locked

30 Comments

View All Comments

  • ggathagan - Sunday, March 18, 2012 - link

    bathotropic is trying to say:
    "I'm too ignorant to realize that someone whose first language is not English has a higher chance of making a slight spelling mistake.
    Even thought the word is spelled correctly when used the second time in the same sentence, I have no life and want to convince myself that I'm superior to others by pointing out inconsequential errors."

    Translation: bathotropic is trying to say:"I'm an a$$hat who acts like a third-grader because I'm on the Internet."
  • AnnonymousCoward - Sunday, March 18, 2012 - link

    Thanks for clarifying.
  • benedict - Monday, March 19, 2012 - link

    This PSU is too expensive for what it's offering. Besides, ignoring the marketing, this is really a 450W PSU, not a 550W one.
    I'm curious what FSP has to offer in that market segment. They used to have really good low and middle-end offerings.
  • Onus - Tuesday, March 20, 2012 - link

    Since Martin ran it up to 110% where it remained efficient and well in spec, and it did not choke, smoke, and croak, I'm not sure I understand why you are asserting that this is only a 450W PSU. Rosewill may have wrecked its PSU reputation a dozen years ago by selling junk, and the tech world has a long memory, but Rosewill seems to have cleaned up its act in recent years.
    The outright lie about the Japanese cap does concern me, but that could be a lie from Sirtec to Rosewill as easily as a lie from Rosewill to consumers; hopefully they can beat their supplier into submission on this one. Iirc, Sirtec was the OEM on some of OCZ's more questionable offerings, that started out well enough, but didn't hold up; this could be another like those.
  • benedict - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Quite simple really, 12V output is 456W, not 550. If you take a look at quality PSUs you'll see their 12V output is almost the same as the advertised wattage of the PSU. If I make you a PSU with 500W on the 3.3V line and 100W on the 12V line and mark it as 600W will you put it in any pc? Fact is, all modern power hoggers in a pc, the CPU and GPU both consume 12V and that's what mostly matters. If you make a PSU with 450W output on the 12V line then mark it as 450W, anything higher is misleading.
  • benedict - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Also, Martin has just reviewed 2 more PSU's from Rosewill, note how their 12V output matches the power rating this time.
  • thetrystero - Tuesday, December 18, 2012 - link

    Can you please elaborate on how you arrived at the 456 figure? Was it by a P=I*V calculation? I could not find that figure anywhere in the article.
  • zero2dash - Monday, March 19, 2012 - link

    Being NewEgg's house brand and generally low priced, I can't say I'd trust EVERY Rosewill product out there, but they do have some that are nice and worth consideration.

    Recently I put together a system with one of their Green series PSU's after reading the Hardware Secrets review....was going to go with the RG530-S12 but then there was a promo on the RG630-S12 putting it cheaper so I went with that instead (fairly easy decision to make...more juice for less $). Anyway it's been a solid PSU and I've heard no complaints from my customer. IMHO it certainly beats the Corsair CX line of which I've had no luck getting one that didn't have coil whine (and therefore I've quit using them).

    Finding a reliable lower wattage PSU around the $50 range that isn't junk is getting hard.
  • samuraid - Monday, March 19, 2012 - link

    Right at the start of the article: "In fact this is the frist time we test a PSU from this company"
    Frist -> First
  • Ryude85 - Tuesday, May 1, 2012 - link

    This psu sells for $44.99 with free shipping on newegg, all the time. At that price, its the best bang for your Buck.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now