Seasonic Platinum Series 1200 W Review 18

Seasonic Platinum Series 1200 W Review

Efficiency, Temperatures & Noise »

Test Setup



All measurements were performed using two Chroma 6314A mainframes equipped with the following electronic loads: six 63123A [350 W each], one 63102A [100 W x2], and one 63101A [200 W]. The aforementioned equipment is able to deliver 2500 W of load, and all loads are controlled by a custom-made software. We also used a Rigol DS2072A oscilloscope kindly sponsored by Batronix, a Picoscope 3424 oscilloscope, a Picotech TC-08 thermocouple data logger, two Fluke multimeters (models 289 and 175), and a Yokogawa WT210 power meter. We also included a wooden box, which, along with some heating elements, was used as a hot box. Finally, we had at our disposal three more oscilloscopes (Rigol VS5042, Stingray DS1M12, and a second Picoscope 3424), and a Class 1 Bruel & kjaer 2250-L G4 Sound Analyzer which is equipped with a type 4189 microphone that features a 16.6 - 140 dBA-weighted dynamic range. You will find more details about our equipment and the review methodology we follow in this article. We also conduct all of our tests at 40°C-45°C ambient to simulate the environment seen inside a typical system with a higher accuracy, with 40°C-45°C being derived from a standard ambient assumption of 23°C and 17°C-22°C being added for the typical temperature rise within a system.

Rigol DS2072A kindly provided by:

Primary Rails Voltage Regulation

The following charts show the voltage values of the main rails, recorded over a range from 60 W to the maximum specified load, and the deviation (in percent) for the same load range.







5VSB Regulation

The following chart shows how the 5VSB rail deals with the load we throw at it.


Hold-up Time

Hold-up time is a very important PSU characteristic and represents the amount of time, usually measured in milliseconds, a PSU can maintain output regulations as defined by the ATX spec without input power. In other words, it is the amount of time the system can continue to run without shutting down or rebooting during a power interruption. The ATX specification sets the minimum hold-up time to 16 ms with the maximum continuous output load. In the following screenshot, the blue line is the mains signal and the yellow line is the "Power Good" signal. The latter is de-asserted to a low state when any of the +12V, 5V, or 3.3V output voltages fall below the undervoltage threshold, or after the mains power has been removed for a sufficiently long time to guarantee that the PSU cannot operate anymore.



The unit's hold-up time was really long! Well done, Seasonic!

Inrush Current

Inrush current or switch-on surge refers to the maximum, instantaneous input-current drawn by an electrical device when it is first turned on. Because of the charging current of the APFC capacitor(s), PSUs produce large inrush-current right as they are turned on. Large inrush current can cause the tripping of circuit breakers and fuses and may also damage switches, relays, and bridge rectifiers; as a result, the lower a PSU's inrush current right as it is turned on, the better.



Inrush current was normal for a 1.2 kW unit, and this unit even uses three bulk caps with a pretty large combined capacity.

Voltage Regulation and Efficiency Measurements

The first set of tests revealed the stability of the voltage rails and the SS-1200XP3's efficiency. The applied load was equal to (approximately) 10%-110% of the maximum load the PSU can handle, in 10% steps.

We conducted two additional tests. In the first test, we stressed the two minor rails (5V and 3.3V) with a high load while the load at +12V was only 0.10 A. This test reveals whether the PSU is Haswell ready or not. In the second test, we dialed the maximum load the +12V rail can handle while the load on its minor rails is minimal.

Voltage Regulation & Efficiency Testing Data - Seasonic SS-1200XP3
Test12 V5 V3.3 V5VSBPower
(DC/AC)
EfficiencyFan SpeedFan NoiseTemp
(In/Out)
PF/AC
Volts
10% Load7.989A1.983A1.965A0.985A119.68W88.00%1225 RPM40.2 dBA 39.14°C0.884
12.279V5.048V3.355V5.057V136.00W 40.97°C230.5V
20% Load17.005A2.968A2.953A1.185A239.55W91.88%1225 RPM40.2 dBA 39.59°C0.935
12.274V5.042V3.350V5.044V260.72W 41.61°C230.4V
30% Load26.382A3.475A3.463A1.389A359.77W93.06%1320 RPM40.4 dBA 40.41°C0.956
12.269V5.038V3.348V5.031V386.62W 42.67°C230.3V
40% Load35.742A3.971A3.944A1.590A479.53W93.42%1765 RPM44.5 dBA 41.38°C0.970
12.265V5.034V3.344V5.017V513.31W 43.85°C230.2V
50% Load44.782A4.968A4.939A1.795A599.44W93.31%2020 RPM46.7 dBA 41.58°C0.976
12.259V5.029V3.340V5.003V642.45W 44.35°C230.1V
60% Load53.827A5.970A5.933A2.000A719.41W93.23%2280 RPM49.6 dBA 42.39°C0.982
12.255V5.024V3.336V4.989V771.65W 45.59°C230.1V
70% Load62.873A6.976A6.929A2.207A839.28W93.02%2470 RPM54.4 dBA 42.76°C0.984
12.250V5.019V3.333V4.975V902.25W 46.47°C230.1V
80% Load71.930A7.972A7.927A2.415A959.12W92.66%2510 RPM55.2 dBA 44.09°C0.985
12.245V5.013V3.329V4.962V1035.10W 48.58°C230.0V
90% Load81.417A8.479A8.450A2.420A1079.10W92.41%2510 RPM55.2 dBA 44.56°C0.986
12.240V5.010V3.324V4.953V1167.80W 49.61°C229.9V
100% Load90.657A8.992A8.941A3.039A1198.96W91.96%2510 RPM55.2 dBA 44.88°C0.987
12.236V5.005V3.321V4.930V1303.85W 50.16°C229.9V
110% Load100.520A8.998A8.951A3.047A1318.95W91.57%2510 RPM55.2 dBA 45.77°C0.988
12.229V5.002V3.318V4.918V1440.40W 51.68°C229.8V
Crossload 10.096A15.012A15.005A0.000A126.67W82.30%2240 RPM48.7 dBA 43.16°C0.900
12.285V5.023V3.338V5.068V153.92W 47.32°C230.5V
Crossload 299.935A1.002A1.002A1.001A1235.37W92.30%2510 RPM55.2 dBA 43.48°C0.988
12.228V5.017V3.332V4.991V1338.40W 48.13°C229.9V
Voltage regulation was very tight on all rails, with the +12V rail very close to the high-end digital competition. The PSU also easily delivered more than its full power at a very high ambient, which shows that it can handle such tough conditions without breaking a sweat, and efficiency was very high throughout. Its sweet spot was at around 40%-70% of its maximum-rated-capacity load, where it constantly registered above 93% efficiency. We were a bit disappointed as the fan was annoyingly loud with high loads.
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Apr 28th, 2024 09:06 EDT change timezone

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