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Best PSU Brand
What is the best PSU company because i am thinking of replacing my original psu for a gpu upgrade. The company must have a PSU that is backwards compatible with my hardware.
What is the best PSU company because i am thinking of replacing my original psu for a gpu upgrade. The company must have a PSU that is backwards compatible with my hardware.
Corsiar, Seasonic
What are you referring to in particular about 'backwards' compatible? All PSU's will work.
All will have molex adapters, 4 pin CPU power, 20+4 breakaway motherboard power.
No really best company for power supply unit as everyone has different experiences but I have had good luck with my corsair power supply which has about 3 years and hasn't failed and have it running stuff like video games with the current specs in my profile. I've heard Antec is another good one as well.
Seasonic (all)
XFX (all)
Antec (Earthwatts series, Neo Eco series, HCG series, True Power New series)
Corsair (TX-V2 series, HX series, AX series)
PCP&C (all)
Silverstone (Strider Plus series, Strider Gold series, Zeus series)
Cooler Master (Silent Pro series)
OCZ (EliteXstream series, Fatal1ty series, Z series)
Rosewill (Capstone series)
Usually all certified (Bronze, Gold, etc) PSUs are usually a good bet. I like Seasonic the best.
Be Quiet and XFX make some very good psu's too although Seasonic is the oem on some of the XFX psu's.
PSU Review Database
The best PSU is the PSU that meets your needs. Always make sure it has the proper plugs. Fully modular is better because you don't have a bunch of useless tentacles hanging off it. Make sure it has the following:
1. ATX12V / EPS12V - for motherboard connection. The bold connection is an 8 pin connection fyi.
2. Output similar to this +3.3V@24A,+5V@30A,+12V@90A, -12V@0.8A,+5VSB@4.0A the underlined and bold part is if you're planing on buying a really power hungry video card like a Nvidia gtx 700 series, otherwise you can get by with 25-30amps on your lines.
3. A quiet 140mm fan.
4. Proper mounting equipment that comes with it, always check when buying in person, unless you're ordering, then well...you can't.
5. Read as many reviews as you can and make an informed decision, don't just buy the one that has flashy cool LED lights etc etc.
And last but not least, use this tool to find out how much watts you will need http://extreme.outervision.com/psucalculatorlite.jsp
For backwards compatibility I would look at the Ikonik Vulcan from around 2008. I had one, was a beast of a PSU.