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PC hardware: Calculating power Supply needed

by Ifrit24 - 5/20/08 8:43 PM
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Post 1 of 11

Calculating power Supply needed

by Ifrit24 - 5/20/08 8:43 PM

So I am planning on upgrading stuff in my computer but I don't know how to figure out if i need to upgrade my powersupply or not. how do i figure it out?
thanks
Ifrit

Post 2 of 11

Widely documented.

by R. Proffitt Moderator - 5/21/08 4:28 AM In reply to: Calculating power Supply needed by Ifrit24

My short version.

20 Watts per drive.
100 Watts for the CPU
40 Watts for the mainboard.
40 Watts for the usual video card
100 Watts for the firebreathing video card.

Add it up and then double it so it lasts for years.
Bob

Post 3 of 11

10,000 RPM hard drive?

by satish_997 - 6/17/08 9:08 AM In reply to: Widely documented. by R. Proffitt Moderator

I assume this would use more than the average 5,400 or 7,200 RPM drive.

About how much more power would you say is used by Western Digital's 10,000 RPM Raptor?

Post 4 of 11

go by the recommendation for your video card

by ramarc - 5/21/08 6:48 AM In reply to: Calculating power Supply needed by Ifrit24

if it's not a gaming video card, just get a 400w power supply.

Post 5 of 11

Here is a site that I have found helpful

by CardsFan29 - 5/21/08 7:22 PM In reply to: go by the recommendation for your video card by ramarc

This site can give you a decent approximation of what you might need PSU wise.

http://extreme.outervision.com/psucalculatorlite.jsp

Post 6 of 11

Thanks for the web site

by Dango517 - 5/24/08 2:11 AM In reply to: Here is a site that I have found helpful by CardsFan29

I've looked this over several times and this is generally difficult to do. The best I'd determined was that if you purchased a $3,000.00 or less PC then go 500 watts, over $3000.00 then 1000 watts. Seams I was right. My calculations from this site recommended 447 watts for my system.

http://extreme.outervision.com/PSUEngine

I would suggest the originator of this post look for a PS that is at least 80% efficient or better. Also the heavier the PS the better. Yep, heavier by weight. This means the PS has more windings and is of better quality. Also, if your running a SLI video card you will need an SLI Power Supply.

Post 7 of 11

Respectfully disagree....it would be easy to overload a 500

by VAPCMD - 5/24/08 9:08 AM In reply to: Thanks for the web site by Dango517

watt PSU in a PC (sans monitor) under $3,000. Just a couple of the high-end...not highest-end, video cards; 2-4 HDDs; 2 CD-DVDs; 4GBs RAM; and dual or quad core CPU and you'd be too close or over the 500 watt PSU threshold. If you bump the PSU to 700 watts and lower the threshold to $1,000 or $1,500 that might be closer assuming it was a quality 700 watt PSU.

VAPCMD

Post 8 of 11

hmmmmm

by Dango517 - 5/24/08 12:13 PM In reply to: Respectfully disagree....it would be easy to overload a 500 by VAPCMD

With up grades I have a $1,200.00 PC. 500 watts would run it well with a little wiggle room. The three thousand dollar mark was for high end multiple (two or more, maybe four) hard drives, more then likely RAID. Two or more Video cards, 4-8 GB RAM, quad processor and water cooling. Certainly this type of PC would need more power. Most PCs are pretty "run of the will" till you pass the 3 grand mark. A system builder might create a $2,000.00 PC that would need a 1000 watt PS but they'd need to be a really shroud shopper. There out there on the net somewhere but the audience here is more mainstream. My comments reflect the audience we deal with here, not the PC gamer elite.

Post 9 of 11

Audience aside, you can spend way under $3,000 and still

by VAPCMD - 5/24/08 2:21 PM In reply to: hmmmmm by Dango517

need a PSU greater than 500 WATT PSU. Said another way...we could probably all agree if you set the dollar threshold much lower.

VAPCMD

Post 10 of 11

(NT) I'm done

by Dango517 - 5/24/08 5:41 PM In reply to: Audience aside, you can spend way under $3,000 and still by VAPCMD

Post 11 of 11

Adding to what others have said....

by VAPCMD - 5/21/08 7:48 PM In reply to: Calculating power Supply needed by Ifrit24

having a higher wattage power supply unit (PSU) is better than a PSU with no reserve or headroom over your minimum requirement. Assuming PSUs with the same efficiency, a 500W PSU uses no more electricity than a 300W PSU in the same system. But in real life, PSUs vary in efficiency....80+ is one of the benchmarks and it's one of the factors to consider when buying a PSU you leave running 24-7.

For example, you might buy an inexpensive 400W PSU for $20 or a higher quality, higher efficiency 400W PSU for $40, $50 or $60 and depending on use, make up the cost difference in efficiency in 4-6 months. Low upfront cost is often not the bargain it appears to be...especially when it comes to reliably powering your system.

If you want to read more about PSUs...do some reading over at http://www.jonnyguru.com/

Good Luck on your search

VAPCMD

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