1st Player SFX 750 W Platinum Review 3

1st Player SFX 750 W Platinum Review

Teardown & Components »

Photos


The small box has appealing artwork. Several icons describe the stand-out features, and its maximum power output figure has been put in the bottom-right corner.


The bundle is rich, including Velcro straps, zip ties, an SFX to ATX adapter, and all necessary fixing bolts and modular cables. There is also the user's manual, and a piece of paper showing the fan-speed profile.


The fan grille has a unique, nonrestrictive design. The front exhaust grille follows the typical honeycomb design. Finally, the usual C14 AC receptacle is used, and there is a power switch.


The unit's model number and efficiency badge are on the sides.


The modular panel has nine sockets.


Compact dimensions and an appealing exterior design.

Cables and Connectors

Modular Cables
DescriptionCable CountConnector Count (Total)GaugeIn-Cable Capacitors
ATX connector 20+4 pin (300 mm)1118AWGNo
4+4 pin EPS12V (450 mm+100 mm)1218AWGNo
6+2 pin PCIe (400 mm)1118AWGNo
6+2 pin PCIe (400 mm+120 mm)1218AWGNo
SATA (120 mm+120 mm+120 mm+120 mm)2818AWGNo
4-pin Molex (120 mm+120 mm+120 mm+120 mm)1418AWGNo
AC Power Cord (1400 mm) - C13 coupler1118AWG-


All cables are short because this PSU is meant for small chassis. It does come with an SFX to ATX adapter; however, it may be rendered useless by the short cables if this PSU is installed into a standard-sized chassis.

This SFX PSU having two EPS connectors is great, but they should be on dedicated cables instead of the same one since these connectors can draw lots of power. The three PCIe connectors also look weird, but four wouldn't make much sense for an SFX PSU.


The peripheral connectors are adequately far apart for an SFX unit.
Next Page »Teardown & Components
View as single page
Apr 24th, 2024 06:17 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts