Can anyone define these PSU terms?

Discussion in 'Power Supplies and UPS's' started by davisphive, Oct 30, 2005.

  1. davisphive

    davisphive Geek Trainee

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    Ok I have read some things about power supplies but I don't understand any of the terminology that is listed in it tech specs. Can anyone define these terms for me, why are they good...or bad?

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    Type ATX12V
    Maximum Power 550W
    Fans 1
    PFC No
    Dual +12V Yes
    SLI Support nVIDIA SLI Certified
    Power Good Signal 100-500ms
    Hold-up Time 17ms min.
    Efficiency > 70%
    Over Voltage Protection +5V trip point < +6.5V, +3.3V trip point < +4.1V, +12V trip point < +14.4V
    Input Voltage 115/230 V
    Input Frequency Range 47 - 63Hz
    Input Current 12A @ 115AC, 6A @ 230AC
    Output +3.3V@32A, +5V@40A, +12V1@19A, +12V2@19A, -12V@1A, +5VSB@2A
    MTBF >80,000 Hours
    Approvals UL, TUV, CB, FCC CLASS B, CUL
     
  2. pelvis_3

    pelvis_3 HWF Member For Life

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    Basically:
    ATX12V - The type of power supply; Compatible with most P4 and AMD systems
    550W - The maximum power output of 550 Watts, which is pretty good
    Fans 1 - Self explanitory
    PFC - A method of increasing the power factor of a power supply. Typically referring to a European requirement. Needed when input power is above 70 watts - normally 60 watts of output will pass without special circuitry
    Dual +12V Yes - This means the power supply has dual +12V rails which are needed by the CPU and Video Card and are a good feature to have and are found in nearly all SLI certified PSU's
    SLI Support nVIDIA SLI Certified - nVidia have certified many PSU's to aquire the SLI standard. If you see a PSU with this certification and want to run two Video cards in SLI, this is good thing
    Power Good Signal 100-500ms - Not sure; someone else will advise
    Hold-up Time 17ms min. - As far as i know, this is how long the PSU will stay on after a surge or power spike
    Efficiency > 70% - This is how effecient the PSU is compared to it's normal power rating when the temperature rises above a certain level
    Over Voltage Protection +5V trip point < +6.5V, +3.3V trip point < +4.1V, +12V trip point < +14.4V -
    At +5.5V the trip point is less than 6.5V, and the rest is self explanitory
    Input Voltage 115/230 V - This is a no brainer
    Input Frequency Range 47 - 63Hz - How many times the PSU turns itself off and on again in seconds
    Input Current 12A @ 115AC, 6A @ 230AC - Nothing needed to know here
    Output +3.3V@32A, +5V@40A, +12V1@19A, +12V2@19A, -12V@1A, +5VSB@2A -
    These are pretty good specs, the +12V Rail is what you need to pay attention to, 19 Amps on both are good
    MTBF >80,000 Hours - Expected lifespan, this is a pretty basic lifespan
    Approvals UL, TUV, CB, FCC CLASS B, CUL - Just a buch of crap no-one cares about except techo's

    Hope i explained it well enough :cool:
     
  3. Big B

    Big B HWF Godfather

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    Pelvis did a pretty good job, but I'll clarify on a few points.

    ATX12V. ATX is a standard motherboard formfactor and power supply specification. 12V is the DC voltage at which the computer components operate with.

    Input voltage 115/230. North American and European power circuits are 115-120 and 230-240V, respectfully, from a wall socket. This spec means that the power supply can work in North America or Europe or anywhere that provides the voltage from a wall socket within either of these two specs. Typically, there's a switch on the power supply that you can change between 115 and 230V.
     
  4. Matt555

    Matt555 iMod

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    Yeah athough some power supplies have automatic switching and can accept voltages anywhere between two values (i.e. mine can accept anywhere between 115~230VAC) Dont mix these up with set voltages!
    Good definitions there pelvis_3 nice one! :good:
    EDIT: I changd the wording slightly, I don't know why I didn't see it before, sorry, yeah now I can see what Addis means, I should have put don't get the Switching Voltage and Set voltages muddled up...
    Switching voltages which can be between a range of values are defined by a ~ between the two values and set voltages have / between them.
     
  5. Addis

    Addis The King

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    What? It must mean 115 or 230, not somewhere in between.
     

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