- Oct 1, 2009
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I'm in a dilemma right now that involves future-proofing and my power supply. Long story short, I want to upgrade my rig's graphics card and I want to upgrade to a power supply that will last me until my next upgrade, not just this one. But I fear that the power supply I'll get is simply overkill and may consume additional electricity (is this even the case?). I don't want to get an in-between just to sell it again when I upgrade in 12+ months time.
I've read this article "Everything you need to know about power supplies" by Hardware Secrets (http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/Everything-You-Need-to-Know-About-Power-Supplies/181/1), but it doesn't answer my questions.
First question. Will getting a power supply with a much higher rating than my rig's actual draw consume more electricity, compared to say a power supply with just enough overhead? i.e. 500W vs 700W PSU for a rig that eats 400W. I'm assuming the 700W PSU will consume more power.
Second question. Is future-proofing your power supply even advised? I'm under the assumption that the PSU's efficiency deteriorates over time, especially when under sustained heavy load over long periods. Also, the fact that PC graphics seem to be increasing in power consumption with each iteration despite the emphasis on mobile graphics these days, which focuses on efficiency. The release of the PS4 and Xbox One may exacerbate this too as developers have a much more powerful target platform now (spoiling developers for the short term), and PC ports haven't been exactly optimized to the same degree as the console builds. We're still early in this console's lifecycle, so if the console builds aren't that optimized, what more the PC ports? This would necessitate even faster, more power hungry graphics from AMD and Nvidia.
Is future-proofing your power supply a bad idea or am I just over analyzing it? I see a lot of people overshooting their power requirements, either to leave room just to be safe or for a future upgrade (which is where I'm at).
Long story is this: after two years, I've returned to PC gaming. But this time I'm going to go with a multi-monitor setup, so I'll really need a much faster graphics card and I'm planning to get the Radeon R9 280X. I'm pretty sure my current PSU can't handle that for sustained periods. Below is my current PSU:
This is a 80+ bronze rated PSU that has been with me since 2011. It has 2x PCI-E molex pins, one 6 pin and one 8 pin (6+2), evenly distributed on the 12V rail. Although I use my rig sparingly, it's been rock solid stable during marathon sessions. My rig has the following specs:
Given my current PSU, the best graphics card I can upgrade to is the R9 270X and possibly a 280X, but the 280X won't leave much headroom and that's dangerous. The 280X alone can spike to 300W. I initially planned to upgrade to a power supply in the 600W region, the FSP Raider 550W or 650W in particular. I'm talking about the new Raider variant, which is also called the 'Raider S' in the US. The new variant (2013-) is silver rated, but actually performs like the gold rated Aurum. The old bronze rated variant of the Raider got a fail mark from HardOCP due to high ripple on load, but the new variant eliminates that and is much better. Would've went Seasonic, but it's too expensive where I live for their gold rated models. However, even the 650W Raider might not suffice if I decide to upgrade to an even more powerful card in the future. So I want to buy the 750W Raider or an equivalent model now.
On an off-topic but related note, I could also upgrade to a Radeon R9 270X 4GB instead so my current PSU will suffice and upgrade my PSU when I finally get that truly "uber" fast graphics card. However, I don't think the 270X is powerful enough to run games on high (not ultra), even at just 4800x900 (3x 1600x900) resolution. I really feel like I need the 280X at least for now. But I don't want to upgrade my PSU twice, once for the 280X and another for the truly uber card (possibly the 290X and 780 Ti's successor, or an R9 295X2).
Any inputs will be highly appreciated. Moreso expert ones.
I've read this article "Everything you need to know about power supplies" by Hardware Secrets (http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/Everything-You-Need-to-Know-About-Power-Supplies/181/1), but it doesn't answer my questions.
First question. Will getting a power supply with a much higher rating than my rig's actual draw consume more electricity, compared to say a power supply with just enough overhead? i.e. 500W vs 700W PSU for a rig that eats 400W. I'm assuming the 700W PSU will consume more power.
Second question. Is future-proofing your power supply even advised? I'm under the assumption that the PSU's efficiency deteriorates over time, especially when under sustained heavy load over long periods. Also, the fact that PC graphics seem to be increasing in power consumption with each iteration despite the emphasis on mobile graphics these days, which focuses on efficiency. The release of the PS4 and Xbox One may exacerbate this too as developers have a much more powerful target platform now (spoiling developers for the short term), and PC ports haven't been exactly optimized to the same degree as the console builds. We're still early in this console's lifecycle, so if the console builds aren't that optimized, what more the PC ports? This would necessitate even faster, more power hungry graphics from AMD and Nvidia.
Is future-proofing your power supply a bad idea or am I just over analyzing it? I see a lot of people overshooting their power requirements, either to leave room just to be safe or for a future upgrade (which is where I'm at).
Long story is this: after two years, I've returned to PC gaming. But this time I'm going to go with a multi-monitor setup, so I'll really need a much faster graphics card and I'm planning to get the Radeon R9 280X. I'm pretty sure my current PSU can't handle that for sustained periods. Below is my current PSU:

This is a 80+ bronze rated PSU that has been with me since 2011. It has 2x PCI-E molex pins, one 6 pin and one 8 pin (6+2), evenly distributed on the 12V rail. Although I use my rig sparingly, it's been rock solid stable during marathon sessions. My rig has the following specs:
Intel Core i7-2600
2x 4 GB DDR3-1333 RAM
Sapphire Radeon HD 6850
WD Blue 1 TB
Seagate Barracuda 320 GB
Lite-On DVD-RW drive
Encore ENMAB-8CM
2x 120 mm with LED, 2x 80 mm with LED
Given my current PSU, the best graphics card I can upgrade to is the R9 270X and possibly a 280X, but the 280X won't leave much headroom and that's dangerous. The 280X alone can spike to 300W. I initially planned to upgrade to a power supply in the 600W region, the FSP Raider 550W or 650W in particular. I'm talking about the new Raider variant, which is also called the 'Raider S' in the US. The new variant (2013-) is silver rated, but actually performs like the gold rated Aurum. The old bronze rated variant of the Raider got a fail mark from HardOCP due to high ripple on load, but the new variant eliminates that and is much better. Would've went Seasonic, but it's too expensive where I live for their gold rated models. However, even the 650W Raider might not suffice if I decide to upgrade to an even more powerful card in the future. So I want to buy the 750W Raider or an equivalent model now.
On an off-topic but related note, I could also upgrade to a Radeon R9 270X 4GB instead so my current PSU will suffice and upgrade my PSU when I finally get that truly "uber" fast graphics card. However, I don't think the 270X is powerful enough to run games on high (not ultra), even at just 4800x900 (3x 1600x900) resolution. I really feel like I need the 280X at least for now. But I don't want to upgrade my PSU twice, once for the 280X and another for the truly uber card (possibly the 290X and 780 Ti's successor, or an R9 295X2).
Any inputs will be highly appreciated. Moreso expert ones.
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