OCZ ZT550W Overview

The OCZ ZT550W comes with the usual assortment of parts: you get an extensive user manual, a US/UK/Europe power cord (depending on your location), and the necessary mounting screws. In addition, the power supply has cable management, so some modular cables with a common sleeving are placed in the package as well.

Rated at up to 540W, the +12V rail can deliver nearly the full power of the PSU. +3.3V and +5V are rated at a maximum capacity of 24A each, with a combined output of 140W. Compared with most modern high-efficiency power supplies (like Corsair), OCZ has no DC-to-DC converters inside. In fact they use mag amp regulators for the smaller outputs which is a suitable solution too.

The whole housing is coated with a black finish. The fan grille with a OCZ logo in the middle is black too, and both sides of the case have an OCZ logo.  As usual the ventilation holes are honeycombed and a large power switch is located next to the AC input. On the front are modular cable connectors, color coded for PCIe (grey) and peripherals (black). The depth of the device is 17,5cm, which is quite much for a 550W power supply.

Cables and Connectors

Connector type (length)

Main 1x 24-pin (55cm) modular
ATX12V/EPS12V 1x 4+4-pin (60cm) modular
PCIe 1x 6/8-pin (55cm) modular
1x 6/8-pin (55cm) modular
Peripheral 3x SATA (ca. 40, 55, 70cm) modular
3x SATA (ca. 40, 55, 70cm) modular
3x Molex (ca. 40, 55, 70cm) modular
3x Molex (ca. 40, 55, 70cm) modular
1x FDD adapter (ca. 10cm) modular

Again the 24-pin and CPU cables are relatively long with 55-60cm. Both 6/8-pin cables are 5cm shorter than the ones Corsair used. The cable sleeving somewhat better but they still use different colors for all wires and no flat cables. The FDD connector is a separate adapter that splits off a Molex connector if needed; there are six Molex connectors available. The peripheral cables have exactly the same lengths like the ones from Corsair, what a coincidence!

Corsair TX550M Measurements OCZ ZT550W Internal Design and Fan
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  • Stuka87 - Monday, March 26, 2012 - link

    On the last page where things are being highlighted, shouldn't the Corsair be highlighted for efficiency and ripple since it was ahead in these categories? Unless the yellow is just meant to show there is a difference. But it seams in the rest of the areas the better supply is highlighted.

    Both supplies look pretty good though, even if priced a bit higher than some similar supplies.
  • Martin Kaffei - Monday, March 26, 2012 - link

    Sounds more correct, right.
    Thanks a lot.
  • lyeoh - Monday, March 26, 2012 - link

    Has Corsair really improved their quality since: http://www.behardware.com/articles/843-3/component...

    FWIW, OCZ and Corsair's nonPSU stuff seem to get returned quite often too:
    http://www.behardware.com/articles/843-4/component...
    http://www.behardware.com/articles/843-7/component...
    http://www.behardware.com/articles/843-8/component...

    Both these PSUs might be OK, but why should I care? There are other manufacturers who have a better track record when it comes to quality. Poor quality in a range of similar models is understandable, but poor quality in different types/classes of products just tells me to avoid buying anything from them.

    I'd prefer to see more reviews of products from manufacturers that care about quality. Who the heck wants to read reviews of food from restaurants that have a long track record of giving a significant percentage of their customers food poisoning? I don't care how good their food looks.

    Are these even significantly cheaper?
  • Samus - Tuesday, March 27, 2012 - link

    My advice to you is stop reading BEHardware.

    Those statistics for every segment they 'measured' are a joke. Just drafting such a distasteful article is a huge lapse in journalism judgement on their part. Nobody in their right mind would gauge component reliability based on return rates over a 6-month period from a single source.

    The only way to measure reliability is by reviewing the initial quality in detail and putting the components into real-world scenarios to report any abnormalities over time. AnandTech and other legitimate hardware review sites do this, as does Car & Driver, Consumer Reports, Home Theater Review, Gun Directory, etc
  • seanleeforever - Tuesday, March 27, 2012 - link

    while i agree with your point of view, but AnandTech rarely review abnormalities over time. and bear in mind AnandTech is more akin to C&D not CR because AnandTech receives cherry picked product directly from manufactures. and you really have to hope what you buy from your local frys is the same as the one they choose to send for reviewing.
  • lyeoh - Thursday, March 29, 2012 - link

    6 month period? OCZ's poor track record goes way back longer than that: http://www.behardware.com/articles/831-7/component...
    http://www.behardware.com/articles/831-4/component...
    http://www.behardware.com/articles/810-6/component...
    http://www.behardware.com/articles/810-4/component...

    You haven't even provided a good reason why anyone should care about your opinion on this subject especially since you said "6 month period".

    I'd believe BeHardware's article more than I'd believe you, especially since a few simple Google searches for product problems do not disagree with their statistics. So it's not just a freak incident where only the french retailer has higher rate of returns for OCZ and corsair stuff.
  • fausto412 - Monday, March 26, 2012 - link

    I have a 6990 and a n AX850 PSU...that psu gets super hot when gaming. Can't imagine a 550 watt psu not melting. I think the days of the 550 watt psu are over unless you only do single card gaming and don't use the highest end cards.
  • Ken g6 - Monday, March 26, 2012 - link

    Did you miss the GTX 680 review the other day? http://www.anandtech.com/show/5699/nvidia-geforce-... The 7970 would work fine with a 550W PSU too.

    Also recall that the 6990 is effectively two cards in crossfire on a single board.
  • Samus - Tuesday, March 27, 2012 - link

    I run a GTX570, Core i7-950, 12GB RAM, 5 hard drives and some other shit off a PCP&C 500-watt PSU. Whole system is reasonably warm after hours of gaming and is completely stable.

    Kill-A-Watt has never reported more than 400-watts drawn from the wall, so my 500-watt PSU never even hits 80% load.

    Any never system with a single GPU draws less power, I guarantee it. 550-watt is overkill for most people with current technology. Remember most OEM systems still ship with 250-watt PSU's.
  • Stuka87 - Monday, March 26, 2012 - link

    I use a Antec NEO-ECO 520C with my over clocked 7950 and its perfectly fine. I never get anywhere close to even 400W at peak (And thats with a 4.1GHz Phenom II) when measured at the wall. The latest chips from AMD and nVidia are incredibly efficient. The 6990 is a pretty big power hog comparatively, and it is a dual GPU card.

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