Super Flower Leadex II 750 W Review 6

Super Flower Leadex II 750 W Review

A Look Inside & Component Analysis »

Packaging


The white box is nice and Super Flower's logo, a butterfly, covers most of the real estate on front. The PSU boasts of its twin certification; however, we find its boasting to be pointless as it will ultimately do no more than really confuse users. What is the point of certifying it at 650 W with 115 V and at 750 W with 230 V? It is common knowledge that PSUs are more efficient with higher voltage input, which has us believe that Super Flower only paid the 80 PLUS fee twice for marketing purposes.


The PSU's features are depicted on one of the box's sides, while the other shows the colors it is available in, which are black and white. Thankfully, we got the black unit, which is easier to take photos of since we use a white backdrop.


Around the back is the specifications table, and a graph here depicts the fan's speeds in relation to the unit's internal temperatures. Interesting photos, icons, and bits of text also refer to the product's most interesting features.

Contents


On top of the unit is the product manual and a nice white bag. The PSU is protected by foam spacers, which is adequate.


The bundle includes the modular cables, fixing bolts, a pouch for storing any unused cables, and another white pouch.

Exterior


The fan grille is still punched into the chassis, but the dimensions of the latter are much more compact than with the first Leadex generation (165 mm as opposed to the 200 mm of the SF-750F14MG, a unit with the same capacity). At the unit's front are two switches, one for activating the semi-passive operation and another for toggling the modular sockets' LED lighting on/off.


The series name is shown on one of the two sides, while the other hosts Super Flower's stamp. The power specifications label is quite large and covers a big part of the unit's bottom side.


The LED-lit sockets look nice, and all but the two sockets for the 24-pin ATX cable are the same.


Finally a Leadex unit with small dimensions. It might not be super compact like some of SilverStone's units, but most cases will easily accommodate it.

Cables


The 24-pin ATX, EPS, and PCIe connectors feature inline filtering caps for top-notch ripple suppression. The only downside is that this makes these cables bulky. The rest of the cables are flat, which we prefer since they block less airflow and are easier to route inside the chassis.
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Apr 29th, 2024 12:16 EDT change timezone

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