Originally posted by: jonnyGURU
Originally posted by: kyubi
doesn't a dual 12 rail psu combine into one when one is only used? i'm confused about that
No.
Here's how it works if a PSU has multiple +12V rails:
You have ONE +12V rail. This rail is split up into multiple separate rails. Each rail is "capped off" with a limiter called an OCP (Over Current Protection).
Power isn't borrowed from other rails because that would mean you would defeat the OCP rendering completely useless. the OCP is there to PREVENT excess current from being delivered to the connector. Not to allow it to get MORE POWER from another rail.
There's no "trapped power" because the Amp rating you see on each rail is not a measure of capability. It's a measurement of limit policed by the OCP. That's why the sum of all of the rails is often far greater than the actual +12V capability of the PSU. For example: A 500W PSU with 360W capability on the +12V rail. This rail is then split into two, each with a 20A limit on it. 12V @ 20A = 240W. 240W X 2 = 480W. 480W > 360W. The 120W overlap is what actually debunks the "trapped power" theory.
Some lower power units, like 430W, 480W, 500W, etc. may have 17A or 18A rails in tandem. This could essentially "trap" power since so much is going to the CPU and only 17A or 18A to everything else. But these PSU's are simply inadequate for high end graphics cards, SLI, Crossfire, etc. in the first place that discussion is really moot.