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Home » Power
PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Quad Power Supply Review
Author: Gabriel Torres
Type: Reviews Last Updated: May 14, 2008
Page: 7 of 10
$ Check REAL-TIME pricing for OCZ Technology Silencer 750 Quad ATX12V & EPS12V Power Supply Not Available S75QB $.
PCRush: $136.80

Load Tests
Hardware Secrets Golden Award

We made several tests with this power supply as described in the article Hardware Secrets Power Supply Test Methodology.



First we tested this power supply with five different loads patterns, trying to pull around 20%, 40%, 60%, 80% and 100% of its maximum capacity (under “% Max Load” we list the actual percentage that was used), watching how the reviewed unit behaved under each load. On the table below we list the load patterns we used and the results for each load.

If you add all the powers listed for each test you may find a value different from what posted under “Total” below. Since each output can have a slight variation (e.g. +5 V output working at 5.10 V) the actual total amount of power being delivered is slightly different from the calculated value. On “Total” row we are using the real amount of power being delivered, as measured by our load tester.

+12V2 is the second +12V input from our load tester and since the reviewed power supply uses a single-rail configuration this input was also connected to the +12V1 rail.

Input

Test 1

Test 2

Test 3

Test 4

Test 5

+12V1

6 A (72 W)

11.5 A (138 W)

17 A (204 W)

22 A (264 W)

28 A (336 W)

+12V2

5 A (60 W)

11 A (132 W)

16 A (192 W)

22 A (264 W)

27 A (324 W)

+5V

1 A (5 W)

2 A (10 W)

4 A (20 W)

6 A (30 W)

8 A (40 W)

+3.3 V

1 A (3.3 W)

2 A (6.6 W)

4 A (13.2 W)

6 A (19.8 W)

8 A (26.4 W)

+5VSB

1 A (5 W)

1.5 A (7.5 W)

2 A (10 W)

2.5 A (12.5 W)

3 A (15 W)

-12 V

0.5 A (6 W)

0.5 A (6 W)

0.5 A (6 W)

0.5 A (6 W)

0.8 A (9.6 W)

Total

6 A (72 W)

11.5 A (138 W)

17 A (204 W)

22 A (264 W)

28 A (336 W)

% Max Load

20.2%

40.1%

59.3%

79.2%

99.5%

Room Temp.

47.4º C

47.9º C

49.7º C

50.1º C

50.9º C

PSU Temp.

50.1º C

50.5º C

51.6º C

50.º C

51.3º C

Voltage Stability

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Ripple and Noise

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

AC Power

171 W

337 W

506 W

694 W

901 W

Efficiency

88.8%

89.1%

87.9%

85.6%

82.8%

Final Result

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

We were really impressed by this power supply.

First, it could really deliver its labeled power at 50º C.

Second, it achieved an outstanding efficiency, between 82.8% and 89.1%. In fact the only moment efficiency was below 85% was when the power supply was delivering its full load.

Third, voltage regulation was outstanding and during all our tests all outputs were within 3% of their nominal voltages – ATX specification defines that all outputs must be within 5% of their nominal voltages (10% for -12 V) –, including -12 V, which usually is not close to its nominal value, and also during our overload tests (see next page).

And fourth, even though noise and ripple weren’t the lowest we’ve seen around they were at  levels below the average, which is excellent. With the reviewed power supply delivering 750 W of power noise level at +12 V outputs was around 50 mV, at +5 V was at 18.6 mV and at +3.3 V was at 20.4 mV.  Just to remember, all values are peak-to-peak voltages and the maximum allowed set by ATX standard is 120 mV for +12 V and 50 mV for +5 V and +3.3 V.

Another thing we liked about this power supply was that noise didn’t increase with increase in load. Usually as we increase the power supply load noise also increases. Noise levels remained practically the same on our load tests.

PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Quad
click to enlarge
Figure 16: Noise at +12V1 input from load tester with power supply delivering 750 W.

PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Quad
click to enlarge
Figure 17: Noise at +12V2 input from load tester with power supply delivering 750 W.

PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Quad
click to enlarge
Figure 18: Noise at +5 V input from load tester with power supply delivering 750 W.

PC Power & Cooling Silencer 750 Quad
click to enlarge
Figure 19: Noise at +3.3 V input from load tester with power supply delivering 750 W.

Let’s now see if we could pull even more power from this unit.

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