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Switching Power Supplies A to Z
Switching Power Supplies A to Z, by Sanjaya Maniktala (Newnes), starting at $94.17
Home » Power
ASUS P-50GA 500 W Power Supply Review
Author: Gabriel Torres
Type: Reviews Last Updated: August 6, 2009
Page: 8 of 10
Real-time pricing for Antec EA-500DGREEN.
Antec Green Energy-Efficient Power Supply EA500D EA-500D GREEN Electronics Usually ships in 24 hours
Amazon: $67.32 Buy.com: $65.24
Wal-Mart: $78.98

Overload Tests

As you know by now, before overloading a power supply we like to see if the over current protection is active and its trigger point. To test this we set current at +12V1 at 1 A and increased current on +12V2 until the power supply shut down. This happened when we tried to pull more than 20 A from the +12V2 rail. It was nice to see the OCP circuit configured at a value close to what is printed on the label (18 A).

Then starting from test five we increased current on all outputs until we reached the maximum the power supply could deliver still working inside ATX specs. The result you can see below. If we increased one amp on any output ripple was higher than the maximum allowed.

The main goal of our overload test is to see if the power supply burns or explodes and if its protections are active. Thus ASUS P-50GA passed this test.

We could pull up to 687 W from this unit, which is always good to see. The problem was efficiency, that was below 70% on this extreme configuration.

Input

Maximum

+12V1

20 A (240 W)

+12V2

20 A (240 W)

+5V

22 A (110 W)

+3.3 V

22 A (72.6 W)

+5VSB

2.5 A (30 W)

-12 V

0.5 A (6 W)

Total

686.8 W

% Max Load

137.4%

Room Temp.

47.5º C

PSU Temp.

54.3º C

AC Power

988.0 W

Efficiency

69.5%

AC Voltage

99.1 V

Power Factor

0.998

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