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Thermaltake Introduces TR2 Bronze Mainstream PSU Series

btarunr

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Thermaltake, leading computer DIY components brand, introduces the brand new TR2 Bronze series of mainstream power supplies. With the 80 Plus Bronze certification these power supplies offer up to 88% efficiency and the 99% Active Power Factor Correction guarantees lowest power loss. The TR 2 Bronze series comes in six wattage models thereby catering to individual user needs. The 380W, 450W 500W, and 600W models are specifically targeting mainstream setups, while the TR2 700W and 800W models are certified for 2-way NVIDIA SLI and ATI CrossFireX supporting more demanding enthusiast and gaming configurations.
The entire series use a dedicated single 12V rail with built-in PCI-E 6pin and PCI-E 6+2pin connectors for support of all high end graphic cards available on the market today.



With high quality 105°C Japanese made main capacitor, the TR2 Bronze series is built robust enough to satisfy even more demanding users, as such capacitors allow for a longer product life time, increased stability , better reliability and improved overclocking performance.

Using an innovative circuit board layout and high-tech components, the TR2 Bronze series is not only an industry leader in energy efficiency, reaching 88% efficiency under real-world load conditions, but furthermore also offers advanced product safety features. Built-in industrial grade protection circuitries protect the power supply from over current, over voltage, under voltage, over power as well as short circuitry. The over power protection (OPP) for example causes power the supply to shut down when the effective loading exceeds 110% to 130% of the maximum rated load.

The new Thermaltake TR2 series offering rock solid performance at an incredible value with 88% efficiency for a wide range of usage models from 380W all the way up to 800W. To learn more about it go to this page.



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I long for the days of the sub 80 dollar quality PSU's, pass!
 
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I have a pretty good experience with LC Power PSU's. One that i had, a LC 550W Green Power is 8 years old and still running fine in my friends system. I had to re-lubricate the fan bearing, but other than that it's working fine. It was below 50 EUR at the time i bought it and when 550W units were pretty much high end stuff.
 
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I have a pretty good experience with LC Power PSU's. One that i had, a LC 550W Green Power is 8 years old and still running fine in my friends system. I had to re-lubricate the fan bearing, but other than that it's working fine. It was below 50 EUR at the time i bought it and when 550W units were pretty much high end stuff.
Thank you for the heads-up!
 
Joined
Nov 13, 2009
Messages
5,614 (1.06/day)
Location
San Diego, CA
System Name White Boy
Processor Core i7 3770k @4.6 Ghz
Motherboard ASUS P8Z77-I Deluxe
Cooling CORSAIR H100
Memory CORSAIR Vengeance 16GB @ 2177
Video Card(s) EVGA GTX 680 CLASSIEFIED @ 1250 Core
Storage 2 Samsung 830 256 GB (Raid 0) 1 Hitachi 4 TB
Display(s) 1 Dell 30U11 30"
Case BIT FENIX Prodigy
Audio Device(s) none
Power Supply SeaSonic X750 Gold 750W Modular
Software Windows Pro 7 64 bit || Ubuntu 64 Bit
Benchmark Scores 2017 Unigine Heaven :: P37239 3D Mark Vantage
I have a pretty good experience with LC Power PSU's. One that i had, a LC 550W Green Power is 8 years old and still running fine in my friends system. I had to re-lubricate the fan bearing, but other than that it's working fine. It was below 50 EUR at the time i bought it and when 550W units were pretty much high end stuff.

I have a 550 watt Kingwin PSU I bought back in high school, about 8 years ago, all but 2 of the 4 fans are dead, but it still works fine, I have it in my garage, powering a music streaming PC. I believe I payed 55 dollars for it, and that was an insane price at the time, try getting a PSU nowdays of any brand to last that long.
 
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