Rosewill Green Series RG430-S12 430W Measurements

Voltage Regulation

+3.3V Regulation/Ripple and Noise
Load Voltage
5% 3.29V (4mV)
10% 3.29V (10mV)
20% 3.28V (18mV)
50% 3.27V (24mV)
80% 3.25V (36mV)
100% 3.24V (38mV)
110% 3.24V (43mV)
Crossload +12V max. +0.61%
Crossload +3.3V/+5V max. +0.30%

 

+5V Regulation/Ripple and Noise
Load Voltage
5% 4.98V (8mV)
10% 4.98V (11mV)
20% 4.97V (17mV)
50% 4.94V (30mV)
80% 4.91V (34mV)
100% 4.88V (40mV)
110% 4.88V (45mV)
Crossload +12V max. +1.00%
Crossload +3.3V/+5V max. -2.60%

 

+12V Regulation (Worst Ouput)/Ripple and Noise (Worst Output)
Load Voltage
5% 12.14V (9mV)
10% 12.08V (11mV)
20% 12.05V (20mV)
50% 11.99V (25mV)
80% 11.95V (29mV)
100% 11.87V (35mV)
110% 11.86 V (37mV)
Crossload +12V max. -4.25%
Crossload +3.3V/+5V max. +3.25%

Noise Levels

Sound Pressure Level (Ambient: 16dBA, 1m distance) and Temperatures (Δϑ to 24.5 °C ambient temperature)
Load Opinion
5% 17 dBA (0.8°C)
10% 18 dBA (2.6 °C)
20% 20 dBA (4.9 °C)
50% 22 dBA (6.7°C)
80% 26 dBA (8.5 °C)
100% 26 dBA (9.1 °C)
110% 26 dBA (10.7 °C)

Efficiency and PFC

Efficiency and Power Factor 115 VAC
Load Efficiency PFC
5% 61.92% 0.872
10% 72.88% 0.902
20% 79.81% 0.926
50% 82.34% 0.938
80% 81.91% 0.942
100% 81.52% 0.949
110% 81.19% 0.957

 

Efficiency and Power Factor 230 VAC
Load Efficiency PFC
5% 63.31% 0.790
10% 74.09% 0.835
20% 80.87% 0.896
50% 83.73% 0.937
80% 83.19% 0.967
100% 82.84% 0.973
110% 82.23% 0.975

Like most current PSUs the Rosewill Green has a low voltage drop on all rails, even at overload. 12V stays under 40mV ripple while +3.3V and +5V reach more than 40mV. The Rosewill Green is nearly not audible at low load; at 50% load we can definitely hear the fan, but 22 dB(A) is far from a bad result. The efficiency isn't great at 10% load, but 80Plus certification only tests at 20, 50 and 100% load so all the results fall in the expected 80Plus range.

Rosewill Green Series RG430-S12 430W -1 FSP Raider 450W 80Plus Bronze -1
Comments Locked

67 Comments

View All Comments

  • Scootiep7 - Thursday, July 5, 2012 - link

    What, no Cooler Master GX 450W Bronze? I CALL SHENANIGANS SIRS! A recount must be done.
  • nubie - Friday, July 6, 2012 - link

    I still love my PC Power and Cooling Silencer 470, from before they were bought up by (forget right now).

    Of course at over $100 it really needs to be worth it, but I have seen some on the 'Bay for $30 or so.

    Too bad that PC Power didn't have a lower power supply in this test, I would have liked to see how they measure up.
  • betam4x - Saturday, July 7, 2012 - link

    I would even go so far as to say 1 KW power supplies aren't needed for most configurations. Running a Core i7 2600k, 16 GB RAM, 6 Hard Drives/SSDs (2x2TB WD Blacks, 2x1TB WD blacks, 1x1 TB Seagate, and 1xSSD 256 GB Force GT) as well as a radeon 6970. under load i pull 400 watts from a 650 watt PS. A bit more than the review mentions, but most people would swear they need a 1 KW ps for this setup.
  • veri745 - Monday, July 9, 2012 - link

    I, for one, would really appreciate some more comparison charts with all of the PSU's stacked up against eachother. You don't need every data point but a summary of at least idle and load, like maybe 50W and 400W, or 20% and 100%, would be much appreciated.

    Something so I don't have to flip through 9 pages to compare ripple, efficiency, noise, and PFC
  • Pappnaas - Tuesday, July 10, 2012 - link

    Again a review by Mr. Kaffei.

    And again you didn't give any information about the size of your reviewed psu's.

    In my view you did not do your homework. You omitted basic facts by not listing the physical dimensions of your reviewed objects. Anandtech tries to keep up a nearly scientific approach to their other reviews.

    Would you omit the measures if reviewing a computer case? A smartphone? A NAS-Box? A car? A TV?

    I brought this point up in several comments, alas to no avail.

    I think you're shooting yourself in the knee.

    Switch to german:

    Wenn grundlegende Dinge wie Maße fehlen, wie vertrauenswürdig ist das ganze Werk? Wissenschaftliche Arbeit fängt bei der Beschreibung der Testobjekte an.

    Wenn also die Grundlagen wissenschaftlicher Methodik verletzt werden, dann stelle ich fest, dass Anandtech die sich selbst auferlegte "professionelle Arbeitsweise" nicht einhält. Sicher ist das ein wenig Haarspalterei, werden einige sagen. Meine Einstellung: Macht es richtig oder gar nicht. Sonst droht Euer Niveau auf das der PC-Welt zurück zu fallen.
  • Bambooz - Sunday, May 5, 2013 - link

    Dein Niveau (wenn man das noch so nennen kann) ist wohl schon auf unter PC-Welt gerutscht. So richtung Computerbild..
  • zoblace - Tuesday, November 24, 2015 - link

    http://www.plugloadsolutions.com/psu_reports/THERM...
    ....on that page they tested Thermaltake Smart 430 and it acheived 80+ Bronze eff. no problem....
    after that could we trust online tests at all....

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now