Thermaltake Toughpower 1500W PSU

April 16, 2008 | 08:18

Tags: #100 #1500w #benchmark #efficiency #full #load #machine #percent #pfc #power #psu #result #review

Companies: #test #thermaltake

Testing Procedure

Thermaltake Toughpower 1500W PSU Testing Procedure and the 80Plus Program
Click to enlarge

We test our power supplies under artificial load conditions and using in-house calculated load levels to check a PSU does what it says on the tin.

While the industry is clearly geared to "real world" testing scenarios, in this situation anything we throw at it should be at most equally stressful in the real world.

The recorded results on the test machine are also manually verified with a multi-meter to check there is no voltage drop between the PSU connector and the load machine to ensure accuracy.



80 Plus Program

Thermaltake Toughpower 1500W PSU Testing Procedure and the 80Plus Program
Click to enlarge
The 80 plus program is an independent certification that PSU manufacturers are now going after in order to fully ratify their products as capable of 80+ percent efficiency at 20, 50 and 100 percent loads and PFC of over 90 percent. It's an electric utility-funded incentive programme to force companies to make more efficient products as wattages spiral ever upwards, in order to save the consumer as much money as possible.

Traditionally people have looked for the Energy Star rating, of which 90 percent of computers on the market currently adhere to, but this was last revised in July 2000, which is somewhere in the region of a millennia in computer years. An updated Energy Star specification (version 4.0) came into effect from July 20th, 2007 and includes the 80 Plus programme's requirements.

In this way even a small increase in efficiency can save quite a considerable amount of money (and the environment) in the long term.


Discuss this in the forums

Posted by Gunsmith - Wed Apr 16 2008 07:41

i bought this psu as it was the only one available at the time to supprt tri-sli and im sorry but i hate it with a passion, sure the specs are nice but its a bloody nightmare to work with and cable, the 8 to six pin pci-e adaptors are a joke and can turn any beutifully crafted machine into a ****ing rats nest.

i have mine up for sale if anyone wants it.

Posted by Scirocco - Wed Apr 16 2008 07:46

Yikes, that's a monster!! Do the all the lights in town flicker when that thing is switched on? ;P

Posted by Guest-16 - Wed Apr 16 2008 07:56

Gunsmith
i bought this psu as it was the only one available at the time to supprt tri-sli and im sorry but i hate it with a passion, sure the specs are nice but its a bloody nightmare to work with and cable, the 8 to six pin pci-e adaptors are a joke and can turn any beutifully crafted machine into a ****ing rats nest.

i have mine up for sale if anyone wants it.
I agree - the cabling could have been done *a lot* better

Posted by [USRF]Obiwan - Wed Apr 16 2008 08:51

seems all overkill to me. I think in the future we don't even have to go that far for power anyway, because the consumers demand for efficient green power rated devices (like videocards, cpu's etc) is getting more and more support. even Bit-tech is measuring power consumption nowadays with testing all kinds of hardware.

Even 3xSLI is overkill, in a few months you may have a single slot PCI-E card that runs around all three filled PCI-E slots with two fingers up the nose.
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