No, you are not.  The figures in the graph that I  posted are total system power consumption at the wall.  That includes  CPU, GPUs, HDDs, everything.
		
		
	 
Yes, that's good 

 I'm seen the machine specs, and it has a SSD ...  eventually I'll have to put a little more room for a mechanical HDD that  pulls more power, but not that much anyway.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			basically, here is a list of MAJOR monetary mistakes.
1. Following or trusting information given on any website with a PSU brand name on it (AKA Antec, Corsair, Seasonic). Because these companies want to sell you the most expensive thing possible, you can't trust them to tell you what to buy.
I use this site
http://extreme.outervision.com/PSUEngine
An i5 build should not draw more than 387W with a GTX 460 at full TDP with 4 usb devices and 1 firewire device. I would recommend something close to 500W.
2. You shouldn't ever get OCZ anything unless it's a solid state drive.
3. Assuming you will upgrade your processor without your motherboard and RAM.
It really isn't worth it, because by the time you are likely to upgrade, the i7 is going to be just as old and slow as the i5.
		
 
		
	 
My rule of thumb is to never take the "official" manufacturers values too seriously ... I only take them as reference and then search and ask around (in anandtech forums for instance 

) about opinions, experiences, etc ....
But in this case, someone at a store told me that I would be better with a 650w for single GTX 460, and definetly go for 750w for SLI ... under a i5 setup ... they also want to sell, but they should also be impartial on giving opinion to the consumer, after all, the client should be well served ...
If the politic were to give a truly safe opinion to a client, they could only sell 1000w ... everyone would get enough power ... eheh
Then I went around some simulators, and the results fall in between powers ...
I really wanted a silent PSU, in an attempt to create a more silent PC. Yes, I'll be running with stock CPU cooler, so it should already bring more noise than a 3rd party cooler, but if I could cut in the noise in some part, that would be beneficial for the resulting PC.
The simulators all have the same appearance 

, i've run through the one you linked:
	
	
		
		
			System Type:        1 physical CPU    
Motherboard:        High End - Desktop    
CPU:        Intel Core i5-760 2800 MHz Lynnfield    
CPU Utilization (TDP):        90% TDP    
            
RAM:        2 Sticks DDR3 SDRAM    
Video Card:        NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460 1GB    
Video Type:        Single Card    
ATTENTION: FOR PERSONAL, NON-COMMERCIAL USE ONLY
            
High rpm SATA:        2 HDDs    
            
DVD-RW/DVD+RW Drive:        1 Drive    
            
USB:        2 Devices    
            
Fans            
Regular:         2 Fans 120mm;      
            
Keyboard and mouse:        Yes    
            
System Load:        90 %    
            
Capacitor Aging (+ W %):        30 %    
            
 
Minimum PSU Wattage:        460 Watts    
Recommended Wattage:        510 Watts
		
		
	 
This recommended 510W is the total PSU rating, right? Not the +12V requirements.
So far, I've abandoned the Silent Pro M500, in favor of the following possibilities:
Silent Pro M600
Pros: Silent, modular.
Cons: 480W (40A) on single +12V rail can put the PSU to a higher continuous stress
95
http://www.coolermaster.com/product....tegory_id=3576
Corsair HX-650w
Pros: Modular, 624W (52A) on single +12V rail (more juice to deliver)
Cons: Costs 20 than M600, noisier?
115
http://www.corsair.com/products/hx650/default.aspx
Corsair TX-650w
Pros: Good brand, price, 624W (52A) on single +12V rail (more juice to deliver)
Cons: Not modular, noisier?
82.50
http://www.corsair.com/products/tx/default.aspx
Strange thing is that, for the Silent product range, it's hard to find any noise chart references ... what kind of product states that is silent, and it's hard to find any numbers about it?
Corsair put some charts on the site, I also found some reviews with their own charts, which I take as reference ... still the reviews I found about M500, M600, M700 only state that "it's really silent", or "we didn't measure, because the environment noise would affect the values" ... so am I to assume it is really, really silent? Like "d@mn! the PSU is broken ... I can't hear it ..." kind of thing?
I'm also throwing the TX650w in the option list, because, although it's not modular, and modular is awesome and helps to keep a better looking and manageable interior case, it should be an HX650w with lot's of cabling, and the HX has good reviews around, and the price is nice, comparing to the alternatives. (On a side note, even the TX-750w has a better price of 102.90).
Also I'm "thinking" about getting the case with a side window, because the shop has them on stock, and without window (my initial choice) has not arrived yet, it's out of stock with no prevision of arrival ... for 9 I'll get the same version with side window, and the modularity may then have some impact on the looks. Also I believe the case has a place to cable management, so maybe a non-modular PSU I could hide the unused cables there.
I have no experience with windowed cases, I believe it has an acrylic window, would it be bad to noise levels?
		
		
	
	
Thanks for your opinions and your patience ... keep them coming it's for a good cause, me getting an up-to-date PC 
