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Namslas90

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ok so for a four rail psu you only add 3 rails together to get accurate picture of amp supply

but what do you do if its a two rail psu? is that still 75% of the total?

Most PSU Guru's say add the rails together and subtract 30%.
For example 18 amps + 18 amps = 36 amps .
36 X.30 =10.8 amps; 36 amps - 10.8 amps leaves you with 25.2 amps.

:toast:
 

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in a very short and simple anwser keakar....YES...dont know why it made sence to me ,but I always did the total math, then used the efficiency % to finish the equation. Say a PSU is 70% eff. then I figured if a PSU is rated for 50amps, when at full load it should truely provide only say 35 of those 50 amps.
 
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Most PSU Guru's say add the rails together and subtract 30%.
For example 18 amps + 18 amps = 36 amps .
36 X.30 =10.8 amps; 36 amps - 10.8 amps leaves you with 25.2 amps.

:toast:

i am guessing that the amps for the 3.3v and 5v rails are standard amounts so it is not necessary to concider them in the equation but some psu have very high amps listed on these rails so why is that?
 

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Well if you do the math that Namslas and I were just speaking of ....that 72amp rail drops down below 60 amps capability!

Hell my OCZGSX700 says 4X18amp rails...which is then 72amps on all 4 rails right? I dont think so it also is in the 60amp range as well I promise ya.
 

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now what to make of the psu that have high amp ratings on the rails like these:

http://www.pcpower.com/products/viewproduct.php?show=T1KWSR&view=techspecs

the amps are higher then the wires can handle and they dont seem to follow the guidelines?

what do you think about the claims made here?

http://www.pcpower.com/technology/myths/#8

If you look at those PSU's and all the other PSU's over 1000 watts they have better wires, then a standard PSU. Somebody here at TPU has allready verified this I THINK is was HeavyH20, but I could be wrong.
 

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i am guessing that the amps for the 3.3v and 5v rails are standard amounts so it is not necessary to concider them in the equation but some psu have very high amps listed on these rails so why is that?

Internally all PSU's are 12v so the 5v and 3.3v rails are just devided from a 12 volt rail/portion of the psu. The voltage is changed but the amps are not affected in the devision of voltage(or at least not much).
 
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well the 700watt ocz psu has this:

+3.3@36A,+5V@30A,+12V1@18A,+12V2@18A,+12V3@18A,+ 12V4@18A,-12V@0.8A,+5VSB@3.0A

now there must be a reason to have higher amps on the 3.3v and 5v rails than the 12v rail? why?
 
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Do the math on the sticker provided by OCZ its near impossible for those numbers to be correct or I'd have a 1000W PSU...here math provided

+3.3 X 36A =118.8W

+5 X 30A = 150W

+12(1-4) X 72A(all combined) + 864

now that leave us with this 118.8 + 150 + 864 = 1132.8W ?????

now even divide with the 30% rule thats 1132.8 X 0.30=339.84W loss

1132.8 - 339.84 =792.96 W total to be delivered by this PSU.

With all that in mind then why is it when this PSU is badged by its OEM (FSP) they label it as a 600W PSU.....As stated B4 it is a ploy by manufacturers to get you on the "OMG look what this has" train of thought.
 
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Do the math on the sticker provided by OCZ its near impossible for those numbers to be correct or I'd have a 1000W PSU...here math provided

+3.3 X 36A =118.8W

+5 X 30A = 150W

+12(1-4) X 72A(all combined) + 864

now that leave us with this 118.8 + 150 + 864 = 1132.8W ?????

now even divide with the 30% rule thats 1132.8 X 0.30=339.84W loss

1132.8 - 339.84 =792.96 W total to be delivered by this PSU.

With all that in mind then why is it when this PSU is badged by its OEM (FSP) they label it as a 600W PSU.....As stated B4 it is a ploy by manufacturers to get you on the "OMG look what this has" train of thought.

well there is why i get so confused by it all. just because you have watts doesnt mean you have amps and the 12v rails seam to have less and less amps now because of more rails.

now if you cant go by the stated amps on the label then we are buying blind.

if we cant believe these numbers then why can we believe any ocz numbers they state?

here s the website info on it: http://www.ocztechnology.com/products/power_management/ocz_gamexstream_power_supply-sli_ready_
and the label: http://www.ocztechnology.com/drivers/GameXstream_700W_chart.jpg
 
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All i can say is do alot of homework and dont just read from one place. The review database was a huge help when I purchased mine(found right here at TPU). That is where I found it was in fact a rebadged FSP. Now I purchased on old experiences (Antec NEO 550 blew up) and word of mouth branding, and lots of reading. I think after all that info processed ,I bought the best my money at the time could afford. Guess all in all it is still sort of a craps shoot, but as posted here B4 ALL COMP PARTS ARE NOT CREATED EQUAL....even same brand and model, the two of them could perform completely different!

If you want a more scientific answer , wait for Kenny as he has the fresh knowledge of electric science, hell even Namslas has a better grasp. All in all just read and take it all with a grain of salt. Do the math yourself, then buy what makes the most sence in all aspects, and hope to hell you dont get something built on a Friday @ 2:30pm.
 
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well to start your homework you need to know what the important facts are and where to get those facts from to make your conclusions about the subject.

everytime i get to a base guideline it is proved to be phony.

stated watts are lied about and exagerated (so you dont have acurate watts to calculate your amps)

stated amps are lied about and exagerated (so the subtracting 25 - 30% rule wont work)

wire size is not listed to even know if they are lying about the amps on them

so i ask you, how are we supposed to come to a conclusion when we dont have real facts?
 
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you are totally incorrect here, anytime a wire has been cut and reconnected by a connector of any kind you will experience a "small" voltage and amperage drop due to the fact that the connection is not solid but plugs and unplugs. corrosion and oxidation on these pins and sockets further increases the voltage and amperage drop through this connection. a solid wire unbroken and solered to the board is always better than a plug in type connection.

the higher the quality of the connector and the type of metal it is made from will determine how much drop occurs but it is a guaranteed fact you will experience voltage and amperage drop.

any basic electronics book will tell you that.

thanks for backing up my point :toast:
 

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Keakar if you look at the sticker on my power supply it shows a maximum of 680w (57*12=684w thats where I got the 57amps from). If I were to try and run all four rails at 18amps I would be at 72amps and my psu would be overloaded seeing as that would be 864w (12*72) coming from a 700w psu.

Panchoman the reason for the 18a is the amount of current going over the wire. Most power supply's are wired with 16ga to 18ga wire. 16ga can carry 22a without overloading and 18ga can carry 16a without overloading (http://www.powerstream.com/Wire_Size.htm). The 18a limit is a safety precaution so you don't draw 72amp over one wire and start an electrical fire.

On Keakar Personal Note.
I said prove me wrong considering I seem to be very argumenitive towards panchoman as far as you guys are saying and I would like to only contribute useful and correct information to this guide, not senseless marketing garb trying to sell PCP&C's single rails over multi rail designs ETC.

I know quite a large amount about hardware design as that is what I'm going to college for next year. My main approach to computer hardware is by logic and explanation, this clears away any marketing ploy by providing only the cold hard truth, much in the way a CSI solves a crime.

In terms of this failing me such as the pci-e 2,0 connector, which i thought was 4x 12v and 4x ground, but it is 3 12v and 5 ground, just with higher gauge 12v wires to allow 4.25amp per wire.

Need more explaination? I seek to serve.

Edit: Keakar

If a single video card required 20amps - 6.25amp (75w) would come from the pci-e bus, another 6.25amp (75w) would come from a pci-e 6pin connector, and the remaining power would come from the pci-e 2.0 8pin 12.5amp (150w) giving you a total of 25a (300w) available. Todays PCI-E 2.0 power supply's have each pci-e plug on a seperate rail so no one wire can become over loaded.

yes you do seem very argutive, if you want to argue with me, i'm sure we can start a new thread thats a battlefield for single rail vs. multi rail, but this guide is meant for contributing information to the community to help them select better psu's.
 

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guys, i have one question to ask you, lets say i have a cpu using 7 amps of the 18 amps that are being supplied to it on its own rail, and lets say i have a compressor or someother power hungry thing on another rail demanding 22A on the 18A rail, what happens? if i'm correct, the amperage cannot be rerouted from the cpu rail to the rail with the compressor because the max the rail can handle is 18A, and the compressor is demanding 22A. what happens when you want to use that compressor? if i'm right, then the the psu wont be able to power that compressor, because it cannot supply 22A on a 18A rail, let along that the 10A that isn't being used on the cpu rail cannot be rerouted to another rail. however if i used the compressor on a single 60A rail, it would work, correct? also because i'm just a kid in high school and i cant understand half the stuff, you guys can rewrite your own rails paragraph and pm it to me with links to back up what you're stating and i'll put the best one up, otherwise i will not lean either way on the rails idea, and leave it to the reader to decide.
 
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think of it like this, all the power is in one bucket where you have lets say 50 amps

your rails are limited to lets call it 18 amps, now you say you used 8 amps from one rail

now all the rails can each give you up to 18 amps but no more then that because they have a regulator that wont allow more then that.

any device can use power from the 12v rail up to that 18 amp limit.

things like video cards drawing lots of power are spread out over the rails so the pci bus is giving it amps and the 12v rail is giving it amps so it doesnt draw all the amps from the plug but also from the pci socket so no one leg needs to supply more than 18 amps.

that is the general explanation but im not totally clear on specifics as to exactly how the amps are divided up.
 

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what about running a compressor or a tec unit? i dont think the pci bus can supply a compressor extra amps which the psu cant supply to it due to rail limitations. and i wonder why we need to buy seperate single rail psu's for a tec system? why cant we just have a dedicated rail on the psu for a tec?
 
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what about running a compressor or a tec unit? i dont think the pci bus can supply a compressor extra amps which the psu cant supply to it due to rail limitations. and i wonder why we need to buy seperate single rail psu's for a tec system? why cant we just have a dedicated rail on the psu for a tec?

because a single rail psu isnt limited to 18 amps, it can run higher amps if it has heavier wires and this is why the extra psu is needed so it can supply the higher amps needed.

also im just guessing here but i believe seperating the power supplies is a protection thing so if there is a failure it wont take down the whole system.
 

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because a single rail psu isnt limited to 18 amps, it can run higher amps if it has heavier wires and this is why the extra psu is needed so it can supply the higher amps needed.

also im just guessing here but i believe seperating the power supplies is a protection thing so if there is a failure it wont take down the whole system.

i had a dual rail psu before, and the only thing that died was the hdd, and dont try to tell me that only the hdd was on one rail...

tecs require a lot of power, and a capped rail cant supply it, but a single rail psu can supply the tec with enough.
 
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i had a dual rail psu before, and the only thing that died was the hdd, and dont try to tell me that only the hdd was on one rail...

tecs require a lot of power, and a capped rail cant supply it, but a single rail psu can supply the tec with enough.

there are no certaintees but to limit what is connected will limit what can be damaged. it can take out nothing as easy as it takes out everything. i seen it take out just the case fan already so there is pure luck as to what if anything can be taken out.

as for single rail, that is exactly what i just said. you asked why they use a seperate psu and that is why, to get enough juice because a single rail puts out more amps because it is not limited to 18 amps output.
 

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there are no certaintees but to limit what is connected will limit what can be damaged. it can take out nothing as easy as it takes out everything. i seen it take out just the case fan already so there is pure luck as to what if anything can be taken out.

as for single rail, that is exactly what i just said. you asked why they use a seperate psu and that is why, to get enough juice because a single rail puts out more amps because it is not limited to 18 amps output.

there we go, so if a single rail psu can work safely and not have any overloads, idk whats so good about a multi psu.
 
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there we go, so if a single rail psu can work safely and not have any overloads, idk whats so good about a multi psu.

well were it has trouble is in more total amps so it adds limited amperage rails so you get higher total amps but not more amps for use on any one rail

so the extra amperage from the power supply is passed through the board

assume you have a psu with total of 54 amps on 4 rails limited to 18 amps each,

lets say the cpu uses 8 amps so you have 10 amps left that can be used from that leg

so the board sends it to the pci bus to use

now you have a video card needing 20 amps, but no one rail can supply it because of the 18 amp limits on each rail. what happens is the video card takes the 10 amps available from the pci bus and uses 6 of those amps and then the second rail gives it the remaining 14 amps it needs to get its 20 amp total. this has used up two of the four 18 amp rails and used 28 amps.

this now leaves you with only two rails remaining to power the rest of the computer but you only have a total of 26 amps left to use from the original 54 amps. (54-28 = 26 amps left)

now the rest of the computer is powered on these two remaining rails but again neither one of which can give more than 18 amps so it is divided up as balanced as you can.

most people wont need more than two rails and unless you have a real high powered video card (8800 ultra) you wont need a 4 rail psu.

if your system isnt very power hungry a single rail would do for powering your sytem but i think at least 2 rails is the way to go because later if you make future video upgrades you dont want to have to replace the psu. really power hungry high end video cards or SLI or crossfire setups is the only reason to use 4 rails IMHO.
 

panchoman

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Processor Amd Athlon X2 4600+ Windsor(90nm) EE(65W) @2.9-3.0 @1.45
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Cooling Thermaltake Blue Orb-- bunch of other fans here and there....
Memory 2 gigs (2x1gb) of patriot ddr2 800 @ 4-4-4-12-2t
Video Card(s) Sapphire X1950pro Pci-E x16 @stock@stock on stock
Storage Seagate 7200.11 250gb Drive, WD raptors (30/40) in Raid 0
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Case Apevia X-plorer blue/black
Audio Device(s) Onboard- Why get an sound card when you can hum??
Power Supply Antec NeoHe 550-manufactured by seasonic -replacement to the discontinued smart power series
Software Windows XP pro SP2 -- vista is still crap
well were it has trouble is in more total amps so it adds limited amperage rails so you get higher total amps but not more amps for use on any one rail

so the extra amperage from the power supply is passed through the board

assume you have a psu with total of 54 amps on 4 rails limited to 18 amps each,

lets say the cpu uses 8 amps so you have 10 amps left that can be used from that leg

so the board sends it to the pci bus to use

now you have a video card needing 20 amps, but no one rail can supply it because of the 18 amp limits on each rail. what happens is the video card takes the 10 amps available from the pci bus and uses 6 of those amps and then the second rail gives it the remaining 14 amps it needs to get its 20 amp total. this has used up two of the four 18 amp rails and used 28 amps.

this now leaves you with only two rails remaining to power the rest of the computer but you only have a total of 26 amps left to use from the original 54 amps. (54-28 = 26 amps left)

now the rest of the computer is powered on these two remaining rails but again neither one of which can give more than 18 amps so it is divided up as balanced as you can.

most people wont need more than two rails and unless you have a real high powered video card (8800 ultra) you wont need a 4 rail psu.

if your system isnt very power hungry a single rail would do for powering your sytem but i think at least 2 rails is the way to go because later if you make future video upgrades you dont want to have to replace the psu. really power hungry high end video cards or SLI or crossfire setups is the only reason to use 4 rails IMHO.

okay so i'm just going to do it neutral aight, it doesn't really matter so, both types of psu's are very good so. and the topic is now closed, along with modular, if you want to correct something else or contribute to the brand/oem list by looking up the oem of the psu you have, that'd be great. i'll be finishing up the guide sometime this week when i find time(probably the weekends)
 
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Case COOLER MASTER Centurion 5 (silver & black)
Audio Device(s) (onboard audio) Realtek ALC892
Power Supply CORSAIR SU-750TX 750W ATX12V / EPS12V
Software Windows 10 Home Premium 64bit Edition
okay so i'm just going to do it neutral aight, it doesn't really matter so, both types of psu's are very good so. and the topic is now closed, along with modular, if you want to correct something else or contribute to the brand/oem list by looking up the oem of the psu you have, that'd be great. i'll be finishing up the guide sometime this week when i find time(probably the weekends)

yes keeping it neutral would be a good idea because each type of psu has its good and bad points so weather you use single, dual, or quad rail psu, each can be a good choice depending on the application your using it on.
 

panchoman

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Joined
Jul 16, 2007
Messages
9,595 (1.57/day)
Processor Amd Athlon X2 4600+ Windsor(90nm) EE(65W) @2.9-3.0 @1.45
Motherboard Biostar Tforce [Nvidia] 550
Cooling Thermaltake Blue Orb-- bunch of other fans here and there....
Memory 2 gigs (2x1gb) of patriot ddr2 800 @ 4-4-4-12-2t
Video Card(s) Sapphire X1950pro Pci-E x16 @stock@stock on stock
Storage Seagate 7200.11 250gb Drive, WD raptors (30/40) in Raid 0
Display(s) ANCIENT 15" sony lcd, bought it when it was like 500 bucks
Case Apevia X-plorer blue/black
Audio Device(s) Onboard- Why get an sound card when you can hum??
Power Supply Antec NeoHe 550-manufactured by seasonic -replacement to the discontinued smart power series
Software Windows XP pro SP2 -- vista is still crap
yes keeping it neutral would be a good idea because each type of psu has its good and bad points so weather you use single, dual, or quad rail psu, each can be a good choice depending on the application your using it on.

most people dont even notice the difference so. though one question i have is: why do tecs require their own psu?
 
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