Hardware Secrets
Home | Camera | Case | CE | Cooling | CPU | Input | Memory | Mobile | Motherboard | Networking | Power | Storage | Video | Other
Content
Articles
First Look
Gabriel's Blog
News
Reviews
Tutorials
Main Menu
About Us
Awarded Products
Compare Prices
Datasheets
Dictionary
Download
Drivers
Forums
Links
Manufacturer Finder
Newsletter
On The Web
RSS Feed
Test Your Skills
Twitter
Newsletter
Subscribe today!
Search





Recommended Book
Switching Power Supplies A to Z
Switching Power Supplies A to Z
By Sanjaya Maniktala
Newnes
Price: $45.00

Home » Power
Corsair HX620W Power Supply Review
Author: Gabriel Torres
Type: Reviews Last Updated: February 19, 2008
Page: 1 of 11
$ Check REAL-TIME pricing for Corsair value select 620w HX Series Modular Cable Design 80 Plus Certified Power Supply $
Amazon: $139.99 Dell Home: $169.99
Newegg: $139.99 TigerDirect USA: $154.99

Introduction
Hardware Secrets Golden Award

HX620W (also known as CMPSU-620HX) is a power supply that Corsair claims can deliver its rated power at 50º C, and featuring a modular cabling system, a big 120-mm fan, active PFC, high efficiency and two video card power cables for you to feed your SLI or CrossFire system. We completely disassembled this power supply to see the components and design used and also tested to see if it can really deliver its labeled 620 W.

Corsair HX620W Power Supply
click to enlarge
Figure 1: Corsair HX620W.

Corsair HX620W Power Supply
click to enlarge
Figure 2: Corsair HX620W.

HX620W features high-efficiency and active PFC. According to Corsair this power supply has an efficiency of at least 80% (compare to less than 70% on regular power supplies), meaning less power loss – an 80% efficiency means that 80% of the power pulled from the power grid will be converted in power on the power supply outputs and only 20% will be wasted. This translates into less consumption from the power grid (as less power needs to be pulled in order to generate the same amount of power on its outputs), meaning lower electricity bills.

Active PFC (Power Factor Correction), on the other hand, provides a better usage of the power grid and allows this power supply to be comply with the European law, making Corsair able to sell it in that continent (you can read more about PFC on our Power Supply Tutorial). On Figure 1 you can see that this power supply doesn’t have an 110V/220V switch, feature available on power supplies with active PFC.

This power supply uses a very good cooling solution. Instead of having a fan on its back, its fan is located at the bottom of the unit, as you can see on Figure 1 (the power supply is upside down). A mesh replaced the back fan, as you can see. Since the fan used is bigger than fans usually used on power supply units, this unit is not only quieter than traditional power supplies, but also provides a better airflow.

On Figure 3 you can see this power supply modular cabling system, used by its peripheral cables. On Figure 4 you can see the peripheral cables that come with this unit.  Corsair made a minor change to the cables that come with this unit since the first time we looked at it (Sep 2006), upgrading the video card power cables from 6-pin connectors to 6/8-pin connectors.

Corsair HX620W Power Supply
click to enlarge
Figure 3: Modular cabling system.

Corsair HX620W
click to enlarge
Figure 4: Peripheral cables that come with this unit.

This power supply comes with 11 peripheral power cables: two 6/8-pin PCI Express auxiliary power cables for video cards (6-pin on older units); peripheral power cables containing two standard peripheral power connectors each; two peripheral power cables containing three standard peripheral power connectors each; two Serial ATA power cables containing three SATA power connectors each; one Serial ATA power cable containing two SATA power connectors; one floppy disk drive "Y" adaptor containing one standard power connector at one end and two floppy disk drive power connectors at the other end; and one fan “Y” adaptor allowing you to connect two fans to a single peripheral power connector.

Pages (11): [1] 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 » ... Last »
Print Version | Send to Friend | | Bookmark Article | Comments (9)

Related Content
  • Corsair HX1000W Power Supply Review
  • Corsair TX750W Power Supply Review
  • Corsair VX450W Power Supply Review
  • SilverStone Strider ST50F 500 W Power Supply Review
  • CWT 750VH 750 W Power Supply Review

  • Recommended Deal
    Power Supply TruePower Quattro 850WAntec.jpg Check out the latest range of Electronics Software & Accessories by Dell and many more 850 Watt TruePower Quattro ATX 12V Power Supply TPQ-850


    Dell Home: $209.99 Amazon: $145.34
    Directron: $139.99 Newegg: $159.99

    Latest News
    NZXT Announces Sentry 2 Touchscreen Fan Controller
    July 2, 2009 - 2:25 PM PST
    Transcend Intros Thermal Sensor-Equipped DDR3 Memory
    July 1, 2009 - 11:40 AM PST
    Cooler Master Launches Universal Laptop Charger
    June 30, 2009 - 5:03 PM PST
    Active Media Products Launches “President Barack Obama” USB Flash Memory
    June 29, 2009 - 6:57 PM PST
    New SSD Drives from Corsair
    June 26, 2009 - 4:33 AM PST
    MSI Announces X-Slim X600 Notebook
    June 25, 2009 - 6:00 PM PST
    Zotac Releases GeForce GTX 275 with 1,792 MB GDDR3
    June 24, 2009 - 7:54 AM PST
    Kingston Launches DDR3-1600 HyperX T1 Memory Kit
    June 23, 2009 - 11:20 AM PST
    Walton Chaintech Announces eSATA/USB Flash Memory Series
    June 22, 2009 - 2:00 AM PST
    Scythe Launches Kamariki 4 PSU Series
    June 19, 2009 - 3:55 PM PST
    .:: More News ::.

    RSSLatest Content
    Thermaltake Element G Case Review
    Corsair CX400W Power Supply Review
    Seventeam ST-750P-AF Power Supply Review
    Rocketfish 550 W Power Supply Review
    In Win X-Fighter Case Review
    Gigabyte G31M-ES2C Motherboard
    BFG ES-800 Power Supply Review
    And The Training Goes On...
    2 TB Hard Disk Drive Battle: Seagate Barracuda LP vs. Western Digital Caviar Green
    Power Supplies Re-Tested - Part 2
    Power Supplies Re-Tested - Part 1
    Hardware Secrets Power Supply Test Methodology
    What WePC Dreams Are Becoming Reality?
    All Phenom Models
    Hardware Secrets @ Twitter

    Our Most Popular Articles
    Maximum CPU Temperature
    986,905 views
    nVidia Chips Comparison Table
    616,461 views
    How to Find Out Your Motherboard Manufacturer and Model
    594,452 views
    AMD ATI Chips Comparison Table
    517,272 views
    Connecting Two PCs Using a USB-USB Cable
    511,678 views
    How To Correctly Apply Thermal Grease
    494,786 views
    ATI Radeon X1300 Pro Review
    466,947 views
    ATI Radeon X1600 XT Review
    457,892 views
    How To Perform a BIOS Upgrade
    342,383 views
    Sempron vs. Athlon XP
    319,860 views

    Latest Threads in Our Forums
    NZXT Announces Sentry 2 Touchscreen Fan Controller
    by Hardware Secrets Team
    Powerful Anti-virus
    by wooly
    Thermaltake Element G Case Review
    by Hardware Secrets Team
    Enermax PRO82+ 525 W Power Supply Review
    by SeldomSeen
    No video signal
    by sandrisb
    ECS GF8200A Black Series Motherboard Review
    by Gabriel Torres
    bottleneck?
    by andybarrel
    HDD and Fan on single cable
    by delta32
    Corsair CX400W Power Supply Review
    by Hardware Secrets Team
    New tft monitor
    by brankomaster
    .:: Visit Our Forums ::.


    © 2004-9, Hardware Secrets, LLC. All rights reserved.
    Advertising | Legal Information | Privacy Policy
    All times are Pacific Standard Time (PST, GMT -08:00)