Tuesday, October 30th 2012
Revised Corsair Enthusiast Series PSUs Can Run Completely Fanless
Corsair unveiled a trio of Enthusiast Series V2 (TX-series) PSUs in Japan, which feature Hybrid Silent Fan Control, a revised thermal management measure that spins down the fan completely under low loads, and begins to spin it up only after a thermal/load threshold is crossed. These PSUs feature the same casing as the modular TX-series V2 models (such as TX-750M), but feature completely fixed cabling. Among the PSUs launched are the new (improved) TX-650 (CP-9020038-JP), TX-750 (CP-9020042-JP), and TX-850 (CP-9020043-JP). The three models are 80 Plus Bronze-compliant, and otherwise feature the same specifications as the Enthusiast Series V2 models in the market, elsewhere.
Source:
Hermitage Akihabara
29 Comments on Revised Corsair Enthusiast Series PSUs Can Run Completely Fanless
Out of interest, is this hybrid feature available on any other Corsair PSUs, or just TX?
The title and the news content conflict with each other; the title says it's completely fanless, but the content says that it "begins to spin ... up only after a thermal/load threshold is crossed".
So like I said the thread title and the content of the post contradict each other.
The rest of us (mostly) communicate using a commonly accepted, dictionary defined understanding of language, which we tend to find makes things way easier.
So you're telling me that if you read "Revised Corsair Enthusiast Series PSUs Can Run Completely Fanless", without reading anything else or having any other information you would think/know that these PSUs are only fanless at low loads?
I think that if btarunr had added the words 'at low loads' at the end of his news title then none of this would have happened.
Your original assertion was that "the title and the news content conflict with each other". This is not the case.
I think that if you had not posted something that wasn't true, none of this would have happened.
8 words vs 9.
Can you not understand how the news title could be 'misinterpreted' the way I have described above?
For the record I can understand how you have come to interpret the news title in the way you have described above.
You can't say that no one else had an issue with it just because no one else has posted in this thread.
So, why don't they stick a quality fan in the PSU's in the first palce and no one would even care between fan and fanless modes if it's already so silent you can't even hear it...
Also, something which no one is considering, is that mechanical devices tend to seize up if standing still for a long time. Therefore, one can imagine the scenario where the fan doesn't come on for a whole year. Then, when the user upgrades from integrated graphics to a GTX 680 or similar, the demand on the PSU goes up and it tries to start the fan. The following could then happen:
- The fan doesn't rotate, eventually overheating, along with the PSU overheating. Funny "hot" smells are noticed from the PSU and it's eventually damaged and stops working
- The fan rotates, but makes a bad noise due to a partially seized and possibly dried out bearing. The noise is loud and irritating, quieting down after several minutes, but not going away completely. The fan does this at every startup
- It runs just fine, like the PSU was new
I think the second option is most likely if the fan was allowed to stand for so long.