EZCool 600W Active PFC PSU, 12cm Fan, SLI Ready


  1. Posts : 19
    Windows 7 RC 64x
       #1

    EZCool 600W Active PFC PSU, 12cm Fan, SLI Ready


    Hi does anyone know if this is really SLI compatible erm I'm building a new gaming desktop for my nephew and well it's really cheap psu but will it work??

    motherboard MBA-M4N72E, 2x 1024MB nVidia GeForce 9600 GSO,
    500Gb Hitachi HDD, OCZ EPP 4Gb (2X2Gb) PC2-6400 DDR2, AMD Phenom 9950 Black Edition AM2+ Quad-Core so any input is welcome :)
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 282
    Windows 10 Professional 64-Bit
       #2

    Go to the SLI Certified Ecosystem page to find out whether your PSU is certified or not.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 2,606
    Windows 7 Pro X64 SP1
       #3

    pillainp said:
    Go to the SLI Certified Ecosystem page to find out whether your PSU is certified or not.
    Good link, but it doesn't list a pair of 9600 GSO cards.

    I'd be more cheerful about recommending (or not) the EZCool PSU if I could see its specs online. Must be a real cheapie.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 19
    Windows 7 RC 64x
    Thread Starter
       #4

    bobkn said:
    Good link, but it doesn't list a pair of 9600 GSO cards.

    I'd be more cheerful about recommending (or not) the EZCool PSU if I could see its specs online. Must be a real cheapie.
    well here is where I found it Eclipse Computers - Product Details hope that help's
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 2,606
    Windows 7 Pro X64 SP1
       #5

    desperado126 said:
    well here is where I found it Eclipse Computers - Product Details hope that help's
    The page is rather short on specs.

    I didn't find the details for that model online, but a similar model has 24A available at +12V. That doesn't guarantee that it won't work for your application, but it's not encouraging.

    For example: if you check the Corsair CX400 at the same vendor, it has (www.corsairmemory.com) 30A available at +12V. Naturally, it costs not quite double the EZCool unit.

    I know that it's easy to spend other people's money, but I suggest that you look further.

    My usual starting point is www.newegg.com, if only because of their "power search" tool. You might give it a look, even though they don't do business in the UK.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 282
    Windows 10 Professional 64-Bit
       #6

    As far as I can see on the web, the general opinion seems to be:

    Cheap, silent, stay away and buy something else
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 19
    Windows 7 RC 64x
    Thread Starter
       #7

    well I finally received and email from them and they said that "it's capable BUT go for this one as it will give you more headroom and this would be better Storm 800watts" ok so basically that 600 one is a trick right?? wow what a great catch it's SLI but not really SLI

    ha ha ha although the storm 800 I know for sure it's a good one cause a friend of my bought it and it works i don't care for how long as i will get OCZ one so it's just for short term :)

    but you gotta love them for try (SLI but not really SLI) ha ha ha
      My Computer


 

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