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Is a Corsair tx650w sufficient for hd4870 crossfire?
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Thread : Is a Corsair tx650w sufficient for hd4870 crossfire?
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Profile: newbie
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the rest of the set up would look like this:
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Profile: Forum Veteran
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Official minimum power requirement for cf 4870 is 500w. It should be enough, but it's cutting a bit close. If you already have the computer, try it out, should work. If you're still haven't ordered parts, get a larger psu. --------------- Q6600@3.6ghz, GA-EX38-DS4 X38 chipset motherboard, 8gb 800mhz ddr2 4-3-3-12, 8800GTS(g92)@780mhz, 1TB 7200rpm 32mb cache hdd, 850watt 12v rails=4x20amp powersupply |
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Profile: nimble knuckle
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^ yes it has the watts and the amps to run them both, but if you're buying new then spend the extra $10 to get a 750w
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Overclocked and Undervolted
Profile: Honorary Poster
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Power wise the TX650 is fine but it doesn't have enough PEG connectors. Molex -> PEG adapters should do the trick, but the TX750 isn't much more expensive and it has 4 PEG connectors to boot. |
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Profile: addict
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Message quoted 4 times
Message edited by htoonthura on 06-29-2008 at 06:59:23 PM |
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Profile: Forum Veteran
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--------------- Q6600@3.6ghz, GA-EX38-DS4 X38 chipset motherboard, 8gb 800mhz ddr2 4-3-3-12, 8800GTS(g92)@780mhz, 1TB 7200rpm 32mb cache hdd, 850watt 12v rails=4x20amp powersupply |
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Profile: addict
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the samsung 2253lw is a very impressive lcd panel imo, you may want to take a look at that one as well. Furthermore it's carried at local stores like costco, so you could just pick it up rather than having to ship it back if it has a bad pixel or two (i own one and havn't had a bad/stuck pixel thus far).
--------------- AMD 5000+BE Brisbane: Arctic Cooling Freezer Pro 64: Raidmax Smilodon w/500w PSU: Gigabyte HD 3870 w/Ultra Durable 2: 2x 1gig G-Skill DDR2 800: Gigabyte GA-M57SLI-S4: Samsung Spinpoint hd321kj: samsug dvd burner: Wireless logitech perfs, thumb ball mouse: |
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Profile: newbie
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ok, so 750W it is then. how about brand name then? corsair is a good psu, no? quiet? |
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Profile: Faithful Poster
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Profile: Forum Veteran
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No psu work at 100% efficiency, even the best ones is about 80% efficient. Plus not all of a psu's wattage is routed to 12v rails, which support cpu, gpu, hdds... basically every major power hungry component. The wattage available to cpu/gpu/hdd is only a fraction of total wattage listed on specs. Also, psus degrade over time, so you need headroom as buffer. And lastly, it's always a good idea to have extra room for possible future upgrade or just to be on the safe side. --------------- Q6600@3.6ghz, GA-EX38-DS4 X38 chipset motherboard, 8gb 800mhz ddr2 4-3-3-12, 8800GTS(g92)@780mhz, 1TB 7200rpm 32mb cache hdd, 850watt 12v rails=4x20amp powersupply |
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Profile: Forum Fixture
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Where are they measuring the wattage, at the socket? If so, then the real load is the wattage times the efficiency at that wattage with that PSU. So if it's measured at the wall it's even a lower actual load.
Message quoted 1 times
Message edited by Zorg on 06-29-2008 at 09:06:09 PM |
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Profile: Faithful Poster
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Profile: Forum Fixture
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So, is it at the wall? you didn't link the article that you got the original graph from. |
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Overclocked and Undervolted
Profile: Honorary Poster
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Profile: Forum Fixture
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Come clean, we know you work for them. |
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Profile: addict
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Thank you guys. |
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Profile: stranger
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Just not true... the rated wattage is it's OUTPUT. If a supply is 80% efficient at it's rated wattage of 550w, then it will pull 687.5w from the wall to do it. Also almost every modern PSU can supply 90%+ of it's total power to it's 12v rails. Go spend a month on jonnyguru.com forum and come back when you know something. When they say 500w minimum that's even being paranoid. you will be just FINE with even a 550w. Bottom line. But a 650w+ Antec or Corsair would never hurt. ;-) Message edited by danbfree on 07-05-2008 at 01:10:31 AM |
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werd.
Profile: addict
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correct, but xx% efficiency means that your power supply will need to draw that much more out of the wall. For instance, if the power supply is rated 80% efficiency at a 400 watt load, where the maximum output is 550-watts (at 50c or whatever), that means that for the power supply to output 400-watts, it would need to draw 500-watts out of the wall. I've posted this before, in the Tom's Hardware low budget test, SLI 8800GT's + E7200 + a NF 750N chipset (which uses up a lot of power) was completely fine, stable and cool under a 400-watt unit. A 4870 CF or a 4870 should be perfectly fine under even a quality 550-watt PSU Message edited by doomsdayda ve11 on 07-06-2008 at 05:15:35 AM --------------- "Steve Jobs is not making enough money" E8400 @ 3.6GHz (9x400FSB 1.32v)|4GB|HD4870 |
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Profile: Faithful Poster
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