Originally posted by: kursplat
this looks a little more beefy
Originally posted by: Zepper
svc.com has an iBest 650W. It has a multitude of power outlets on the back panel - AC, 12V, 3.3V etc. I haven't seen a normal ATX PSU with more power than those two. If you really need more, it is probably more cost effective to rig a duallie.
.bh.
Not sure--never really looked. There's a 50/50 chance. Last I saw, the looked the right size from the rear, but could be pretty deep (never seen the PSUs all the way out, and inside, that's where there are a ton of cables bunched up, there's just room to read the specs on the top supply). I wouldn't swear to it, but I'd pin it as a modified SuperMicro chassis.Originally posted by: Zepper
Cerb,
Are those Dell 700W PSUs normal ATX form factor and connector compliment or special for dual Xeon rigs?
.bh.
Originally posted by: Cerb
Not sure--never really looked. There's a 50/50 chance. Last I saw, the looked the right size from the rear, but could be pretty deep (never seen the PSUs all the way out, and inside, that's where there are a ton of cables bunched up, there's just room to read the specs on the top supply). I wouldn't swear to it, but I'd pin it as a modified SuperMicro chassis.Originally posted by: Zepper
Cerb,
Are those Dell 700W PSUs normal ATX form factor and connector compliment or special for dual Xeon rigs?
.bh.
...and further googling:
Zippy 700w
Originally posted by: Zepper
I'm not a Tom's fan either, but in this case you can see the raw data for yourself and draw your own conclusions. Granted the PCP&C units output was within 10% of their ratings but still if it says 510W, it should push that with some headroom.
. And Tom's didn't test other factors that are as important as output and efficiency - ripple and noise (not sound noise, but unwanted frequency waves in the output). In which categories I am sure the PCP&C units would kick butt.
.bh.
Originally posted by: Big Lar
I couldn't agree more as to Tom being a bit less than original. I run the PCPOWERCOOLING in the link above, been running it for 3 years with no probs whatsoever. I have never seen a supply put out as consistent voltages as this 1. I honestly can't see where anyone would need more watts either, as I run a full scsi system,( 1 15k drive, 1 10k backup, 2 burners, 1 cdrom,an fx5900 ultra, a P4 3.0 that will run flawlessly at 3925 with near perfect voltages,yada yada yada).I don't like to sound like a walking billboard advertisement for pcpower, but I have tried all the rest/ yes, all of em, and found these to be the Absolute best.
I really hadn't heard much about them, but my father, a sysadmin, was finally looking for a good server for his company to do dev work on (they got bit by not having anything in-house to simulate the environment their stuff will actually work on)--actually to test on. It seemed 2/3 or so of rackmount barebones that looked half-way worth buying had ZIppy PSUs, and practically any that had a SCSI backplane were Zippy (though there were a few Enermax ones as well).Originally posted by: hytek369
i guess zippy is more familiar in the server crowd. people in this forum (like me) tend to hear more of enermax and PCP&C
Originally posted by: Cerb
I really hadn't heard much about them, but my father, a sysadmin, was finally looking for a good server for his company to do dev work on (they got bit by not having anything in-house to simulate the environment their stuff will actually work on)--actually to test on. It seemed 2/3 or so of rackmount barebones that looked half-way worth buying had ZIppy PSUs, and practically any that had a SCSI backplane were Zippy (though there were a few Enermax ones as well).Originally posted by: hytek369
i guess zippy is more familiar in the server crowd. people in this forum (like me) tend to hear more of enermax and PCP&C