Thursday, August 30th 2012
Corsair Announces Availability of AX1200i Digital ATX Power Supply
Corsair, a worldwide designer and supplier of high-performance components to the PC gaming hardware market, today announced the worldwide availability of the Corsair AX1200i Digital ATX Power, the World's most advanced PC power supply unit (PSU) for PC gamers and enthusiasts.
The AX1200i Digital ATX Power Supply was first announced at Computex Taipei 2012, where it won a prestigious "Best of Computex 2012" award from Tom's Hardware. Other recent accolades include the HEXUS.net Wish List award, TechPowerUP! Editor's Choice award, TweakTown Must Have award, Guru3D.com Best Hardware award, and many more. Maximum PC magazine in the US also selected the AX1200i for use in its Dream Machine 2012, a yearly feature that uses only highest-quality PC components to build the ultimate PC."We're hugely excited to announce that our award-winning AX1200i PSU is now available to enthusiasts and gamers worldwide", said Thi La, Senior Vice President and General Manager of the PC Components Group at Corsair. "This incredible power supply has created a huge stir in the market, winning numerous prestigious accolades, and securing Corsair's position as the leading manufacturer of premium quality PSUs."
The Corsair AX1200i's digitally-controlled power circuitry delivers incredibly stable voltages, and exceptionally low ripple and noise. The use of a Digital Signal Processor also results in a simplified circuit design, and incredible energy efficiency. The AX1200i easily achieves 80 PLUS Platinum certification, and can operate in a silent fanless mode until the PSU reaches between 30 - 40% of its 1200 watt power rating. In addition, the AX1200i's DSP-based design and Corsair Link technology provides real-time monitoring of temperature, current draw, and power efficiency, as well custom control of fan speeds and overcurrent protection settings.
Pricing and Availability
The AX1200i Digital ATX Power Supply is backed by a seven-year warranty and is available now from Corsair's worldwide network of authorized retailers and distributors. The suggested US retail price is $349 USD.
For more information on AX1200i Digital ATX Power Supply, please visit: www.corsair.com/ax1200i
The AX1200i Digital ATX Power Supply was first announced at Computex Taipei 2012, where it won a prestigious "Best of Computex 2012" award from Tom's Hardware. Other recent accolades include the HEXUS.net Wish List award, TechPowerUP! Editor's Choice award, TweakTown Must Have award, Guru3D.com Best Hardware award, and many more. Maximum PC magazine in the US also selected the AX1200i for use in its Dream Machine 2012, a yearly feature that uses only highest-quality PC components to build the ultimate PC."We're hugely excited to announce that our award-winning AX1200i PSU is now available to enthusiasts and gamers worldwide", said Thi La, Senior Vice President and General Manager of the PC Components Group at Corsair. "This incredible power supply has created a huge stir in the market, winning numerous prestigious accolades, and securing Corsair's position as the leading manufacturer of premium quality PSUs."
The Corsair AX1200i's digitally-controlled power circuitry delivers incredibly stable voltages, and exceptionally low ripple and noise. The use of a Digital Signal Processor also results in a simplified circuit design, and incredible energy efficiency. The AX1200i easily achieves 80 PLUS Platinum certification, and can operate in a silent fanless mode until the PSU reaches between 30 - 40% of its 1200 watt power rating. In addition, the AX1200i's DSP-based design and Corsair Link technology provides real-time monitoring of temperature, current draw, and power efficiency, as well custom control of fan speeds and overcurrent protection settings.
Pricing and Availability
The AX1200i Digital ATX Power Supply is backed by a seven-year warranty and is available now from Corsair's worldwide network of authorized retailers and distributors. The suggested US retail price is $349 USD.
For more information on AX1200i Digital ATX Power Supply, please visit: www.corsair.com/ax1200i
26 Comments on Corsair Announces Availability of AX1200i Digital ATX Power Supply
P.S. Waiting for lower power models with digital control system and solutions from such companies like Enermax or Antec :)
You would most definitely need a 1200w PSU for 4x HD7970s. Just one alone consumes close to 230w
The other thing you should probably find out is at peak the 7970 only pulls 190 watts. Each card added will cause all cards to pull less and less wattage. I would be honestly surprised if a quad 7970 set up pulled more than 600w which happens to be quite a bit less than the measured consumption of dual GTX 295's or dual 4870X2's both of which pull in the 700w range according to many reviews and personal ownership of both setups along with many other quad GPU configs. Just FYI the recent review of the 7990 conforms to that with peak power consumption at ~300w.
Very very limited market, yes, and many people buy more powerful PSU's than they actually need, but there is a point to those units.
That is full system draw at the wall meaning that it only actually pulls around 850w if we use their ~87% efficient power supply from the review. 850w draw peak is fine on a good 850w unit which will be rated for 850w continuous at 50C. The reason I linked to w1zzard's review is other reviewers measure at the wall for a system without a video card and then with not a very accurate benchmark as far as I am concerned.
The added power draw of 100-200mhz on the video cards still isn't enough to cause an issue with any GOOD 850w remember those units are rated to a peak of 1000w.
Total system power consumption is literally 4 W away from 400 W. Stock speed of the cards is 900 MHz.
OC to 1200 MHz, a 33% OC(I know, killer OC capability on these GPUs), power consumption for hte card NEARLY TRIPLES, and the full system pull 836 W.
That's jsut two cards, and actually, I've been told my cards clock really well.
That's with a 3770K, 4.6 GHz, which pulls jsut under 100 W. You can figure ~75W for the board.
With a 3960X @ 4.6 GHz,(CPU voltage just 1.275 V), power consumption at stock is 498 W, which increases to 950 W.
And that is not having the cards maxed out...that's just 1200 MHz on the GPUs, no memory OC, and my GPUs can go higher.
850 W barely cuts it, depending on the rest of the system. And, i have killer 3770K (4.6 GHz @ 1.2V or less) and 3960X chips...most CPUs will pull signifigantly more than mine...I've seen very similar 3770K, for example, needing 1.225 V for 4.6 GHz, pull 20 W more than my chip.
I used to recommend 850W unit for dual GPU, 1200 W for three or four, but today, I have a hard time doing so. I am sure htere are going to be many instances where such PSUs will not be enough to max out the system. BOth nVidia or AMD...they got some killer chips with huge OC potential on both sides.
I would never want my PSU pulling 1000w. Efficiency then would just go through the damn floor, and I don't want that. Im all about power efficiency when it comes to my PSUs.
Pretty damn simple equation for power consumption of any processor CPU/GPU/APU...
CPU Overclocked Watts = Default Watts x ( S0 / S ) * ( V0 / V ) ^ 2.
Where,
S0 = Overclocked Processor Speed,
S = Default Processor Speed,
V0 = Overclocked Processor Vcore Voltage,
V= Default Processor Vcore Voltage.
You can think what you want I will continue to run my heavily overclocked rig with a simple little 850w continuous unit.
yeah with efficiency at 50% :laugh: :rolleyes:
Furmark? Please.
Did you forget I do motherboard and memory reviews here for TPU? I am very very careful in what I post, specifically because of that. I fully expect users to verify what I say on my own, and accept that as fact. Using furmark...that's stupid. Just outright stupid. Actually, yes, if you want to get the maximum out of any system, and you can provide ample cooling, 1200 W is NOT enough. Just ask any real extreme multi-GPU bencher how many PSUs they use, and also notice PSUs like EVGA's new one, having functionality built right in so that it can be daisy-chained with other matching units.
3960X pulling 450W? 8150 pulling 450W as well? YOU BET. It takes LN2 or similar to remove al lteh heat fast enough, but it's definitely possible.
MY bad 3960X pulls up to 155W stock, and that's not counting VTT power.
It's no big deal.
BTW, your math for overclocked silicon is WRONG. there is not a single formula that applies, as silicon quality differs form chip to chip.
For example, my 3770K draws 90W-100W @ 4.6 GHz. Erockers pulls about 120W. Those two chip prove your math wrong.
Default Watts? There is no such thing reported by CPU OEMs. They report TDP..which doesn't refer to power drawn..it refers to cooling needed.
I'm sorry ,CDA, but your knowledge here, fro mpast hardware, doesn't apply today. Technology is very differnt now, than it was even just two years ago. You really should invest in a newer system and see the differnces for yourself..on hte Intel side of things, it's pretty amazing, I think.
When it comes to PSU reviews you need not read other reviews if you read JG.