How low is too low for the 12v line?

Ketchup

Elite Member
Sep 1, 2002
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I have a Skyhawk GM570PC 570-watt power supply and am using Speedfan to monitor my voltages. I noticed that the 12v line stays down around 11.71 while I am gaming and goes back up to 11.9 in windows. Is 11.7 volts cause for concern?
 

John

Moderator Emeritus<br>Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
33,944
4
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You should ignore software readings. Spend $10-$20 on a DMM to test the rails.

The rails should be within ±5%
 

Zepper

Elite Member
May 1, 2001
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Yeah, Sears has their $20. DMM on sale t his week for around $11. Every home should have one...

.bh.
 

dBTelos

Golden Member
Apr 17, 2006
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"The rails should be within ±5%"

So that would be 11.4V is the lowest you can have while staying in spec? Similarly 12.6V is the highest you can go while staying in spec?
 

w00t

Diamond Member
Nov 5, 2004
5,545
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Originally posted by: John
You should ignore software readings. Spend $10-$20 on a DMM to test the rails.

The rails should be within ±5%


I am going to have to go with John Here
 

JBT

Lifer
Nov 28, 2001
12,094
1
81
Originally posted by: w00t
Originally posted by: John
You should ignore software readings. Spend $10-$20 on a DMM to test the rails.

The rails should be within ±5%


I am going to have to go with John Here

agreed
 

Zepper

Elite Member
May 1, 2001
18,998
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Navid,
. Yes, that's the one.

I concur with eelw or +/- 1V is fine in real life usages. The +12 rail is not used to power anything but drives and fans directly. For all other purposes it is reregulated down to a much lower voltage and filtered locally so as long as there is maintained a substantial ratio between the input voltage and the output voltage of the local regulators and the 12V rail is capable of providing adequate current, the output voltages of those sub-regulators will be just fine.

And the servo motors on drives can easily compensate for +/- 1 volt. The standard on the +12 used to be (and not long ago either) 10%. IAC, the standard for the +12 now is at +/- 5%. So if it measures outside that into a reasonable load (2A on the +12 and 3 to 5A on the +5 - yes both should be loaded for accurate regulation) with an accurate DMM, then the PSU is RMA-able. I don't know why software is so unreliable for voltage readings - it must be the cheap health monitor chips used in PCs these days.

. OTOH if you're measuring without a load (or too little of a load - the higher the Amp rating of a rail, the heavier the load needed for accurate regulation) then you won't get accurate readings as the regulation won't be working properly on most switching PSUs.

.bh.
 

SparkyJJO

Lifer
May 16, 2002
13,357
7
81
Originally posted by: John
You should ignore software readings. Spend $10-$20 on a DMM to test the rails.

The rails should be within ±5%

Agreed, software reads my 12V line at anywhere between 11.69 and 11.86 but a DMM shows that it is actually just about spot-on at 12.01V with none of the fluctuations that the software reads.