Enough power for potential build?

jsburruss1

Junior Member
Feb 15, 2011
6
0
0
So I'm looking to put together my first build using the new Sandy Bridge processors. I made the mistake of ordering my i7 2600k before coming to a conclusion about which motherboard I wanted to buy. I went about buying the rest of the parts to the build while I deliberated on the Motherboard choice. Needless to say, the Cougar Point recall happened before I could place my order either for the Asus P8P67 Pro or the Deluxe. I am furious at myself for this, but that doesn't do me much good now. What I do need to know is how powerful my PSU needs to be to run my system. The complete system, when finally put together in April or whenever:

-COOLER MASTER HAF 932 RC-932 Case
-i7 2600k
-Asus P8P67 Pro or the Deluxe (still haven't decided obviously)
-EVGA GeForce GTX 580
-Patriot Viper Xtreme 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3
-WD VelociRaptor WD1500HLFS 150GB Internal Hard Drive
-WD Caviar Black WD6402AAEX 640GB Internal Hard Drive
-Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
-Standard DVD-RW drive

I have also made the rookie mistake of already buying a PSU; a CORSAIR HX Series CMPSU-850HX 850W.

So, to all of you more experienced persons, will this PSU run my proposed system effectively and relatively efficiently? I do plan on attempting a little over-clocking to the CPU. I would like it stable around 4300 to 4500 Mhz if that helps. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank You.
 

HOOfan 1

Platinum Member
Sep 2, 2007
2,337
15
81
Your PC would run on a quality 550W PSU, so yes the 850W is more than enough.

The HX850 will probably be from 85%-90% efficient at the load your PC puts on it, so yes it will run your PC efficiently.
 

BoomerD

No Lifer
Feb 26, 2006
66,323
14,725
146
That PSU would probably run two computers with your specs.

(of course, the cabling won't work...but you'd have enough power)

From my "How much do you NEED?" thread:
The specs of my rig:
CoolerMaster HAF 932 case with the stock fans
ASUS P7P55D-E Pro motherboard
i5-760 Processor
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 CPU cooler with both fans in push/pull
EVGA GTX 460 1 Gb Superclocked Card (1373AR)
4 x 2 Gb Corsair XMS RAM running in XMP 1600 MHz mode
1 Samsung SATA DVD burner
1 Samsung IDE DVD Burner

With stock clocks on the processor, this rig draws surprisingly little wattage:
after everything loads following boot sequence..maxed during load at 201, then dropped to 102, settled in at 94-96 watts at idle
Running Furmark @ 1024x768 in Extreme Burning mode: 300 to 310 watts. (310 with GPU fan at 100% for testing)

With the processor overclocked to 3534 MHz,:
Idle 140 watts, (maxed at 230 during boot & load process)
Furmark 1024x768 Extreme Burning Mode: 340 to 352 watts (GPU fan @ 100% for testing)
 

tomoyo

Senior member
Oct 5, 2005
418
0
0
Your only mistake was probably spending too much money. Otherwise you're in fine shape.
 

Termie

Diamond Member
Aug 17, 2005
7,949
48
91
www.techbuyersguru.com
Yes, your PSU is way more than you needed. I'd be surprised if you ever hit 50% of its capacity, and in that sense, you won't be working at peak efficiency (~87%). Your peak load will be 350-375w, and you'll probably achieve about 85% efficiency at that level.

While you're waiting, pick up an SSD. No reason to run your OS off a 150GB velociraptor anymore. That's a rookie mistake!