Read more.All models feature a liquid cooled Intel Core i7-7700K, up to GTX 1080 Ti, and NVMe SSD.
Read more.All models feature a liquid cooled Intel Core i7-7700K, up to GTX 1080 Ti, and NVMe SSD.
I may be REALLY out of touch here as I've not built a PC for quite some time, partly because I spent a load of cash on a top of the range watercooled beast which still works just fine and is still paying itself back (I bought good but expected it to last and it certainly has done just that) but something really strikes me as odd here...
Please correct me if I'm wrong but don't top of the range GPUs still usually need two power connectors (usually and 6 and an 8 pin) as well as the PCIe bus's power? Doesn't that mean that if they give you a 400W PSU with a 1080Ti and an i7 that you're going to be running very close to the margin? I always bear in mind that is peak power output usually quoted rather than designed sustained power so, whilst I know TDPs have dropped a lot, that seems to be a cop out on a high end system and really limiting upgrading.
Am I this out of date? If I'd have put 400W or even 500W in my system it would have worked fine most of the time for general use but would have likely lost stability at max chooch during gaming, limited my upgrade potential as well as risking shortening the lifespan of the PSU. I'd expect something like this which will be bought by enthusiasts who may well want to upgrade or overclock to have a way bigger PSU - like 750W or something. Am I wrong? Please do tell me if I am as it'll inform my next build.
400W is a bit low for that particular configuration, the 500W is all these need.
Personally when building a PC I'll use a PSU calculator which will give a general indication of where you need to be aiming for when buying a PSU. 500W is probably fine for this (I'd guess it would use tops 450W without overclock), but saying that I wouldn't want to overclock anything (do you really need to with the 7700k and 1080Ti?).
This is a rather special system, small form factor and water cooled, I don't expect people buying this will want to upgrade beyond plugging in a few USB peripherals.
So within that constraint, Corsair make the PSU they are putting in their system so they should have a really good idea of what it is capable of. I would expect the 400W rating of one of these to be sustained output, not momentary peak like the cheap PSUs quote.
The 1080ti in a 6700K overclocked system draws 330W, so a 500W psu should allow some margin:
The ti systems have a 500W PSU, the 400W is for the plain 1080
I have the SF450 myself and its the same line as in the Corsair One:
http://forums.hexus.net/reader-revie...enchmarks.html
I posted power consumption figures for the system when I tested the GTX1080 - at the wall with a IB Core i7 it was well under 300W with a GTX1080FE.
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