Friday, June 24th 2016

FSP Announces 700W Variant of its Twins Series Redundant PSU

FSP, the performance power specialist, is pleased to announce its new FSP700-70RGHBE1 PS2 redundant Power Supply. The FSP700-70RGHBE1 joins the FSP500-70RGHBB1 as the latest server-grade power supply from FSP. This time, two highly reliable 700W power supplies are offered, achieving 22.4W/in3 (watt per cubic inch,) the highest power density currently available in a standard PS2 redundant form factor.

The two fully redundant, modular power supplies operate at 80 Plus Gold efficiency, and no specialized bracket is needed for installation. It is the first PS2 redundant which fits 80% of ATX chassis on the market without needing a special bracket. It's compliant with both desktop ATX 12V and server EPS12V standards, suitable for many industrial PCs, and also compatible with rackmount server chassis 3U and above. It offers reliable, 24-hr performance at temperatures up to 50°C.
80 Plus Gold Efficiency in a Server-class Power Supply
The FSP700-70RGHBE1 is a 80 Plus Gold certified switching mode power supply which uses active power factor correction and DC to DC convertors to provide stable, efficient power with low ripple and noise. It offers peak efficiency of 90% even when running at 50% load, saving significant operating costs. As a more efficient power supply, it lowers both electricity and cooling costs, killing two birds with one stone.

ATX 12V and EPS12V Compatible
The FSP700-70RGHBE1 is a PS2 redundant Power Supply that fits in 80% of all standard ATX PC or Tower server case without need for modification or special brackets. Both ATX 12V and EPS 12V connectors are provided for maximum motherboard compatibility. For users not using an ATX chassis, FSP provides 4 set of brackets which allow this product to fit with most server chassis on the market. With a single PSU form factor serving a range of server chassis, distributor and system integrators can stock less SKUs, reducing inventory and warehousing costs.

Truly Redundant and Reliable
The hot-swappable FSP700-70RGHBE1 is fully redundant with each of the two power supplies featuring its own power pin-out. Under normal operation, the two power supplies share the load for efficient and stable power delivery. If one supply fails, the other one automatically takes over for a clean failover. Hot swappable capability means a failed power supply can be replaced without system downtime. Besides all these reliable features, it's also compliant with FCC, CB, TUV, CE, UL and CCC standards.

Server Grade Construction
Building on its experience creating top-tier power supplies, FSP is using reliable, server-grade components in the FSP700-70RGHBE1. Each power supply features a dual ball-bearing fan, premium capacitors, and has over current protection, short circuit protection, over voltage protection, and fan failure protection. Reliability is backed by a MTBF of 100,000 hours and a 3 year warranty.

Standardized Form Factor for an Economical Upgrade
The FSP700-70RGHBE1 is an affordable power supply upgrade for servers. Instead of having to buy new mounting hardware to fit a more powerful power supply, users can upgrade to the FSP700-70RGHBE1 to receive 700W of reliable power in a standard form factor and they can upgrade their power supply unit to a higher wattage without having to change their server chassis. For non-redundant application, the power supply is also offered with a single PSU with the same reliable server grade construction, certifications and safety protections. In these applications, FSP offers a dummy unit for aesthetic purposes.

LED Alarm Guard
The LED alarm guard feature alerts operators to problems in the system and simplifies problem diagnosis. If a power supply fails, an alarm will go off and an LED indicator will show which power supply needs to be replaced.

Product Highlights
  • Fully 700W PS2 Redundant Power Supply with remarkable power density
  • Hot swappable modular design
  • 230V 80PLUS Gold certified with 90% peak efficiency at 50% load
  • Compatible with 80% of ATX chassis on the market without needing a bracket
  • Complies with both standard ATX 12V and server EPS 12V power supply standards
  • Complete protection: over current, short circuit, over-voltage, and fan failure
  • Wide input AC range from 100V to 240V
  • Reliable, 24 hour operation even at 50°C
  • Low ripple and noise
  • Digitally managed power supply with PMBus firmware
  • Complies with FCC, CB, TUV, CE, UL and CCC certification or declaration requirement
  • Backed by a 3-year warranty
Add your own comment

10 Comments on FSP Announces 700W Variant of its Twins Series Redundant PSU

#1
Caring1
Nice, the only problems I see are the potential price, and the need for an extra power cord to plug in.
Posted on Reply
#2
Nokiron
Caring1Nice, the only problems I see are the potential price, and the need for an extra power cord to plug in.
I'll imagine that the biggest problem for personal use would be the noise.
Posted on Reply
#3
Hood
If this unit is so "truly redundant and reliable", why only a 3 year warranty? Most of the decent brands now have 5, 7 and even 10 year warranties (EVGA, Corsair RMx) for their gold and above units. Only crap brands like Raidmax (700 watt Titanium - 2 year warranty) still have these 3 years (or less) warranties on high efficiency units. If FSP wants to compete at this level, they'll have to do better than that.
Posted on Reply
#4
DeathtoGnomes
Caring1Nice, the only problems I see are the potential price, and the need for an extra power cord to plug in.
I've seen Y-cords somewhere IDR.
NokironI'll imagine that the biggest problem for personal use would be the noise.
If this is like similar PSUs they have a 40mm fan IDK how much noise they can make.
Posted on Reply
#5
Sp33d Junki3
HoodIf this unit is so "truly redundant and reliable", why only a 3 year warranty? Most of the decent brands now have 5, 7 and even 10 year warranties (EVGA, Corsair RMx) for their gold and above units. Only crap brands like Raidmax (700 watt Titanium - 2 year warranty) still have these 3 years (or less) warranties on high efficiency units. If FSP wants to compete at this level, they'll have to do better than that.
They do not need to compete as this is not consumer usage. Server grade PSU are well more robust than your standard PSU you buy in store.

As for noise, who cares. This is going into home server that will likely be out of the way.
Posted on Reply
#6
R-T-B
HoodIf this unit is so "truly redundant and reliable", why only a 3 year warranty? Most of the decent brands now have 5, 7 and even 10 year warranties (EVGA, Corsair RMx) for their gold and above units. Only crap brands like Raidmax (700 watt Titanium - 2 year warranty) still have these 3 years (or less) warranties on high efficiency units. If FSP wants to compete at this level, they'll have to do better than that.
Warranty isn't the end all. That Raidmax Titanium you quote for example is actually a damn nice unit.
Posted on Reply
#7
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
R-T-BWarranty isn't the end all. That Raidmax Titanium you quote for example is actually a damn nice unit.
I would still prefer a longer warranty though. But yes, there a plenty of good units with shorter warranties.
Posted on Reply
#8
Jism
There still are ATX-sized 4U cases that are hold into a serverrack, there is no room for server specific PSU's but only ATX's standard ones.

For a PSU thats tend to run for 24/7 usage at proberly 50 to 70% of it's load, 2 year is a hell of a go.

Regular PSU's get rated for 8 hours a day, not 24/7 usage.
Posted on Reply
#9
DeathtoGnomes
JismThere still are ATX-sized 4U cases that are hold into a serverrack, there is no room for server specific PSU's but only ATX's standard ones.

For a PSU thats tend to run for 24/7 usage at proberly 50 to 70% of it's load, 2 year is a hell of a go.

Regular PSU's get rated for 8 hours a day, not 24/7 usage.
Yea thats a damn shame too cuz my rig is on 24/7. They need to add that spec to the sheets. I'd like to know upfront if a PSU has a short lifespan.
Posted on Reply
#10
Jism
Upon normal 8 hours usage, they proberly do longer then the advertised 2 years of warranty. Server stuff is really enterprise market, which means all ratings are way higher then regular stuff.

For consumers there's still plenty of ways to put a enterprise PSU into your case. Even ATX cases with room for 2 PSU's. Combine that with a beefy UPS and you should be safe on the power.
Posted on Reply
Apr 29th, 2024 05:16 EDT change timezone

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