Friday February 10, 2012 8:52 PM AEST

Everything you need to know about power supplies

By Ashton Mills
13:53 Jul 8, 2008
Tags: PSUs
 »
Everything you need to know about power supplies
Related Articles

The specifications and features you should be looking for

The primary task of a power supply is to take the AC (alternated current) input and convert it to DC (direct current), and to do so at a variety of voltages required by the components of a PC. The specs of a PSU are defined by a number of factors, so how can you tell what to look for?

What’s watt?
The most important function of a PSU is its output power, measured in watts. In simple terms a watt is the rate at which energy is transmitted by a circuit, although other factors play a role (such as resistance). Generally, wattage is measured by multiplying amperage by voltage.

PSUs are commonly marketed by their total output power in watts. The value is a total of all the separate output rails combined (more on this below), but it can sometimes be misleading: firstly, as a combination of all the rails, you don’t necessarily get access to all that power where you need it most. Many PCs these days rely heavily on the +12v rail, and two identically rated 500W PSUs can provide two different output maximums on the +12v rail, for example.

Secondly the rated output power isn’t a hard limit. A 500W PSU can output more than this, but it’s not rated to do so efficiently or stably, and ultimately protection circuits kick in.

Finally, a PSU’s output power is also rated for a given temperature. Any good PSU for a PC will be rated for 50 degrees Celsius. The temperature rating is important – as a PSU heats up, its efficiency can decrease. This is known as the de-rating curve, and we’ll cover this more below.

You will also see some PSUs advertised with a ‘peak’ rating. Ideally, don’t use this as a consideration for purchasing, look for the ‘real’ rating that the PSU can consistently deliver. Any good PSU usually has a ceiling above its rating, but if you need that much power you’d be better off getting a more powerful PSU in the first place. That said, some cheaper PSUs are rated higher than the real output wattage they can reliably deliver. This is a dodgy practice but is usually relegated to low-end yum-cha units.

 
 »
 
This article appeared in the June, 2008 issue of Atomic.

Behind the scenes with Mass Effect 3! GTX 560 VGA round-up! Essential Skyrim tweaks to improve your game! Plus reviews, news, hardware, more games, and easy to following modding guides for PC builders. ON SALE NOW!
 
Latest Competitions
 
Atomic Magazine

Issue: 133 | February, 2012

Atomic is a magazine aimed squarely at computer enthusiasts, gamers, and serious PC upgraders.

Every month we bring you the latest reviews of new technology and PC components, in depth features on everything from overclocking to console hacking, and gaming previews and interviews.
 
Latest Comments
 
Latest User Reviews
Battlefield 3 is the new benchmark online FPS
90%
A very fun and realistic multiplayer ride.
 
Antec Kuhler 920 - liquid cool
90%
Antec Kuhler 920 silent but effientive out of the box no maintence water cooling kit
 
Antec's Lanboy Air - our new favourite case
90%
Antec Lan boy Air in red a very cool design
 
Antec's Lanboy Air - our new favourite case
90%
This product overall is awesome.
 
MSI's GT780 laptop as fast as it gets
90%
Nice laptop
 
 
Close Get the February, 2012 issue of Atomic mailed to you for $8.95, including postage.

SubscribeBuy nowDigital Version