Monday, September 16th 2013
Why Settle for 1500W When You Can Get 2000W in a 20 cm Long PSU?
Chinese PSU OEM Great Wall unveiled a new 2,000-Watt power supply under its own channel brand (model: GW-EPS2000DA). Built in the 20 cm-long ATX form-factor, the PSU features a 90 - 265V input range, and is 80 Plus Gold-qualified (certification pending). It complies with EPS 2.92 standard, and supports low-power C-states on Core "Haswell" processors. Its maximum power output, however, depends on its input voltage. When plugged into 90 - 120VAC lines (US, Japan, Canada, etc.,) it caps out at 1600W. When plugged into 210 - 265VAC lines (EMEAI, Greater China, etc.,) it belts out its maximum 2000W.
Connectivity on this fully-modular PSU includes a 24-pin ATX, four (that's right, four) 8-pin EPS connectors (which can each be split to two 4-pin connectors); eight 6+2 pin PCIe connectors, nine 4-pin Molex, twelve SATA, and one 4-pin Berg connectors. The unit relies on a 140 mm temperature-controlled fan to keep cool. Great Wall is rolling out the unit in the Chinese market first, where it will command a staggering 3,998 RMB (US $654).
Source:
Expreview
Connectivity on this fully-modular PSU includes a 24-pin ATX, four (that's right, four) 8-pin EPS connectors (which can each be split to two 4-pin connectors); eight 6+2 pin PCIe connectors, nine 4-pin Molex, twelve SATA, and one 4-pin Berg connectors. The unit relies on a 140 mm temperature-controlled fan to keep cool. Great Wall is rolling out the unit in the Chinese market first, where it will command a staggering 3,998 RMB (US $654).
49 Comments on Why Settle for 1500W When You Can Get 2000W in a 20 cm Long PSU?
Yay finally FX 9590 met its match!
:laugh:
^Also FX-9590 :p
But hey, what do i know?
Edit: We aren't all Americans over here. Some may find that a tad insulting to boot! :p
www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/OCZ-ZX-Series-850-W-Power-Supply-Review/1204
crmaris, I challenge you to review this monster! :)
Anyway I don't know why people are saying it'll explode, Great Wall are capable of building solid things afaik. I want it reviewed ASAP in any case.
You had better be plugging this into a 50 amp. wall outlet or you'll just pop the breaker constantly.
240v single phase service looks more like this, with the orange being the 0v neutral.
So even if the resultant output of split-phase looks a lot like that blue line on the bottom image, it's not working the same way to achieve that output. I don't think I would be willing to try it out.
Single 12V rail. :wtf: