- Joined
- Oct 29, 2009
- Messages
- 2,669 (0.50/day)
System Name | Old Gateway / Steam Deck OLED LE |
---|---|
Processor | i5 4440 3.1ghz / Jupiter 4c 8t |
Motherboard | Gateway / Valve |
Cooling | Eh it doesn't thermal throttle |
Memory | 2x 8GB JEDEC 1600mhz DDR3 / 16gb DDR5 6400 |
Video Card(s) | RX 560D 4GB / Navi II 8CU |
Storage | 240gb 2.5 SSD / 1TB nvme |
Display(s) | Dell @ 1280*1024 75hz / 800p OLED |
Case | Gateway / Valve LE |
Audio Device(s) | Gateway Diamond Audio EMC2.0-USB 5375U ($15 a long ass time ago), Valve |
Power Supply | 380w oem / 65w valve USB-C |
Mouse | Purple Walmart special, 1600dpi. Black desk mat |
Keyboard | SteelSeries Apex 100 / virtual |
VR HMD | Lmao |
Software | Windows 10 / Steam OS |
Benchmark Scores | It can run Crysis (Original), Doom 2016, and Halo MCC. SD LE 45fps |
hey i was just saying...plus we dont know how old this PSU is it may decay down alot seeing how its 80+ and has HFC i would say its not one of the old old cheapy FSP but cant ever be to sure
I agree... although i was told my 400watt would handle a GTS 450 guess what happened? Fried motherboard and a hard drive. (and of course the psu).
one thing i'd like to point out, yea it has 2 12v rails at 16A, but that's the absolute max that can come out of those rails... its a 350watt psu... 2x16A x 12v = 384watts, and that's not including w/e is drawing from the 3v and 5v. there's more than just looking at the rails. first you need to find out how much power is already being drawn and then figure out how many watts are left over for the 12v rail/s. Then divide that by 12 to get the available amps.
Think of it as a breaker in a house... you have your main breaker (400A for example) and then breakers for the lines. lets say you got 20lines all with 30A breakers. well the main switch only handles 400A so you wouldn't be able to run every line at full load
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