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Untitled Document
Testing
Now what would be a good stress test for a power supply? how about
putting it in a top of the range overclocked system, with watercooling, an XP
3200+ (kindly supplied by AMD) and a Radeon 9700pro. Then perhaps taking it
to i17 for 4 days of virtually non stop fragging in a room that got as hot as
the mid 30s? Yes, I think that's about as stressed as a power supply can get.
It passed with flying colours. My machine only crashed once in
the 4 days, and that was due to a stray wire in the GPU fan. The air coming
out of the back of the power supply got rather warm, but it was still rock solid
stable. The only component that suffered from the heat was my rather elderly
hard drive.
So what does it look like inside? As you can see here, all the
heatsinks are arranged to take best advantage of the airflow from the 120mm
fan. The internal layout isn't too cluttered, and the board is the standard
size. You can see the gap where an 80mm fan would have gone on a conventional
design.
Conclusion and Summary
This is the absolute Rolls Royce of power supplies. It is very
well built, powerful, but quiet at the same time, a combination you don't often
see. Aesthetically, this is the best looking power supply I have ever seen,
and would be my first choice if I had an acrylic case. The only nit I can find
to pick is the miserable 4 Molex connectors. I wont count the documentation on
the minus side, a good laugh every now and then is good for you. The cheapest price we found was £51.40 from Special Tech. We think that is a reasonable price to pay for such a high quality PSU.

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