Conclusion

FSP developed the Aurum PT 1200W unit to engage in direct competition with the other companies that are already marketing 80 Plus Platinum certified 1200W units. It is a very limited market, but manufacturers do feel the need to have an advanced top-tier product, as it reflects on the company's prestige and competence. This is especially true for ODMs such as FSP, as they sell their designs and manufacturing capabilities to other companies, so they need to convince them that they can develop high performance designs as well. The Aurum PT 1200W unit can be found retailing for $240, the same price as Seasonic's Platinum 1200XP3 and significantly less than similar products from other manufacturers.

The quality of the Aurum PT 1200W is very good overall. From the Japanese capacitors to the inversion/conversion transistors, FSP is using some of the best quality components available today, which also explains the 7-year warranty. The assembly quality is good but it could have been better, as we spotted several odd-looking soldering joints.

The Aurum PT is also very well made externally, with the uniformly applied textured paint and octagonal openings creating a visually unique appearance. The only aesthetic dissonance is the use of two kinds of modular cables: flat, all black SATA/Molex cables and typical sleeved cables with color-coded wires for the CPU/GPU/motherboard cables.

When it comes to performance, the Aurum PT 1200W unit actually disappointed us a little. Even though the overall performance of this PSU is excellent, we had higher hopes regarding the "E-Sync" technology that allegedly improves the power output quality. The power output quality of the FSP Aurum PT 1200W unit is comparable to that of its primary competition, which is good but not exceptional by today's standards and considering the target market.

The Aurum PT 1200W is also a very quiet 1200W unit, but the side effect is that it has very high operating temperatures. Using it in environments with high ambient temperatures or running it with a heavy load for prolonged periods of time is not a wise idea. We would not recommend this PSU for use with cryptocurrency ASICs. Gamers should enjoy it very much though, as it is one of the quietest 1200W units available and the temperatures inside a well-designed gaming system should not be overly high.

In conclusion, the Aurum PT 1200W is a well made, reasonably priced product that offers good overall performance. The only actual problem of this product is the very limited market that it is trying to appeal to, as a very small percentage of users actually need this kind of power. It may not generate great sales, but we feel that FSP mostly wanted to prove that they could create a high quality and reasonably priced top-tier product. If you are a gamer or a professional with three or more high end GPUs, the FSP Aurum PT 1200W will not disappoint. We'll also likely see other brands of PSU use FSP's design in the coming months, and those may improve on what few blemishes exist.

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  • Hrel - Thursday, October 16, 2014 - link

    Starts at 30db? Not interested.
  • kmmatney - Thursday, October 16, 2014 - link

    "The unit is actually almost entirely silent up to 60% load, at which point the fan starts to speed up and becomes audible. "
  • Death666Angel - Thursday, October 16, 2014 - link

    Pretty sure they don't have a sound proof room to test, so 30dB is their noise floor.
  • bsim500 - Saturday, October 18, 2014 - link

    "Pretty sure they don't have a sound proof room to test, so 30dB is their noise floor."

    ^ This. The only "quiet sound testing" which is useful these days is from SPCR (SilentPCReview) who built their own anechoic chamber with a single digit noise floor, and are very nitpickety over the quality of the sound too (clicking, buzzing, coil whine, turbulence, etc).
  • just4U - Thursday, October 16, 2014 - link

    It seems a bit silly that they'd make the chassis look so nice only to slack off with the cables.. I expect that (but don't like seeing it..) in cheap units.. but not in higher end products that try to hit all the key points. FSP you can do better.
  • wetwareinterface - Thursday, October 16, 2014 - link

    this supply is a quality unit, gives 1200 watts, and is only $240. fancy cables means you up the price to $300 plus. and the market for sleeved cables is really small and served best by the custom choices out there.

    after you spend an extra $100 on sleeved cables you want them in a color to match your build not whatever color fsp decided to give everyone.
  • Gigaplex - Thursday, October 16, 2014 - link

    Simply using all-black wiring would be sufficient in most cases and not cost any extra. The multicoloured wiring doesn't look good in any build.
  • just4U - Friday, October 17, 2014 - link

    exactly.
  • eek2121 - Friday, October 17, 2014 - link

    Take it from someone who works for a company that owns a large portion of the (braided) sleeving market. If you are charging your customers a markup for what amounts to $0.25 worth of sleeving...you are doing it wrong.
  • just4U - Friday, October 17, 2014 - link

    A lot of people who build computers want a nice clean uniform look to it all... it's not really even a plus anymore but rather a requirement. It doesn't necessarily add to the cost either and if it does it's certainly not by the amount your suggesting. That's not to say you can't spend that much with aftermarket items and/or certain themed products but it's not normally something that adds a ton to the overall pricing.

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