Enermax PRO82+ 525 W Power Supply Review
By Gabriel Torres on May 9, 2008 Page 2 of 10

A Look Inside PRO82+ 525 W

Hardware Secrets Golden AwardWe decided to disassemble this power supply to see how it looks like inside, what is the design used and what components are used. Please read our Anatomy of Switching Power Supplies tutorial to understand how a power supply works inside and to compare this power supply to others.

In this page we will have an overall look, while on the next pages we will discuss in details the quality and rating of the components used.

 

The first thing that caught our eye when disassembling this power supply was its 120-mm fan, which uses a 4-pin connector. First we thought it would be a PWM fan, but we got this explanation from Enermax:

“We use a bivoltage fan. We have a patent on this. Normally, when you use a fan, you lower voltage down to 3-4 V, which impacts also the hall IC of any fan, which controls the fan. With such voltage it gets unstable. By using a bivoltage fan (12 V for the hall IC and custom voltage to the bearing – any voltage, way lower than 3) we can go down to 450 rpm (even lower if we would want to). By still having the hall IC powered by 12 V, it can run/control the bearing with its custom voltage more smoothly. That's the difference to any single voltage. But we do use a standard two ball bearing fan, custom manufactured for us. That is what is looking like PWM, but you can see two 12 V wires and no PWM cable. Other manufacturers can match this only by using PWM sleeve bearing fan with limited lifetime. So we are pretty proud of our patented invention and having the world's most silent PSU fan control (and series) without sacrificing on heat or cheating even with sleeve bearing.”

Enermax PRO82+ 525 W Power Supply
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Figure 3: Fan with 4-pin connector (dual-voltage fan).

Enermax PRO82+ 525 W Power Supply
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Figure 4: Overall look.

Enermax PRO82+ 525 W Power Supply
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Figure 5: Overall look.

Enermax PRO82+ 525 W Power Supply
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Figure 6: Overall look.


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