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I noticed on the connector where you plug it into the mobo, there are a few a brown patches which means a few pins are gettting really hot for some reason. Its a 350w psu
MrBean_pm said:@ Sapphiron: I would investigate case ventilation, and input power quality if I were you. I have had the same powersupplies for quite a long time now, torturing them to bits, yet they last, outputs as stable and within ripple-spec as on day 1. Why?
Because I have a 750A APC UPS, and another 1.5KW UPS - proper quality units.
@ ShockG: Thanx for your support, but, what you say is the truth, these are great units, and I would hate some other problems wrt case vent or input power quality knock them down.
But, as an alternative, Seasonic is also great for any budget rig, again, quality input mains power is a must.
If people stick to these simple rules of thumb, they will not need to replace any psu's for a long time.
Br,
MrBean.
I always thought low priced UPS do not give surge / lightning protection... ?
PS: All my own kit runs on 2 APC 1500VA SMART UPS's
Thanks for all your help guys, I went with the AOpen 400w PSU and it works well. Thanks again
$795
Even in Australian Dollars that is a fortune for a PSU
LOL. Sorry, but for that a couple of guys here wants you to fork out up to R5000. That is perfectly normal actually as long as there aren't any wires melting. It has more to do with the type of plastic being used for the connector. Even my new 6 month old Thermaltake 420W is starting to do it and my old 350W PSU did the same. Haven't seen one yet that doesn't do it after some time so expect your new one to also do it.theriddler said:I noticed on the connector where you plug it into the mobo, there are a few a brown patches which means a few pins are gettting really hot for some reason. Its a 350w psu
MrBean_pm said:[jealous mode on] a Bit of an overkill there, wouldn't you say [/jealous mode off]
If you REALLY think you need more fans then buy an unregulated power supply which generates less heat and requires less cooling and connect all your fans to that alone and also use it for your mods like lighting and stuff.
Ok, so why do they tell us to add so many watts to the power supply for every fan used?MrBean_pm said:Even bigger 120mm fans only draw around 0.2A (200mA) max from the 12V line at full load - so 5 of these will draw 1A - but, most of them is rated around 180mA, so make it roughly 6x 120mm fans will only draw 1A.
No, I actually did mean unregulated.No need for seperate psu - and yes, it must be regulated, otherwise it's ac
You probably meant unfiltered?
It's overheating that accelerates it, but why do some of them do it and others don't. So far everyone I had turned brown at some point. There's no way those were all bad connections as even the plugs not in use turns yellow. That's why I say it's more to do with the plastic itself. Old things discolour and heat causes them to discolour faster. If it doesn't get too hot to touch then it aint broken and you can't really call it overheating as you would have to throw out every appliance in the house.And the reason the plastic goes brown has nothing to do with type of plastic they're using - it is overheating, that's why it goes brown.
Ok, so why do they tell us to add so many watts to the power supply for every fan used? So with 10 fans like some of these cases actually have you can use up to 24W (12*0.2*10) plus all your case lighting and stuff. Still makes sense to use a separate power supply for all of that.
It still has a bridge rectifier that converts the ac supply to a dc one and smoothing capacitors to produce a supply that is smooth enough for use with with fans and lights. That is the correct electronic term for it
It's overheating that accelerates it, but why do some of them do it and others don't.