Wednesday, August 26th 2020
Corsair Readies CX-F RGB Line of Entry-level PSUs Targeted at Gamers
Corsair is preparing to launch its CX-F line of entry-level PSUs with RGB LED lighting, targeted at gaming PC builds on a budget. A successor of the company's CX line of value PSUs, the CX-F series began surfacing on retailers such as PC-Canada. It comes in capacities of 550 W (model: CP-9020216-EU), 650 W (CP-9020217-EU), and 750 W (CP-9020218-EU), and color options of black and white (CP-9020225-EU, CP-9020226-EU, and CP-9020227-EU).
Under the hood, these PSUs offer single +12 V rail design, 80 Plus Bronze efficiency, active PFC, and LLC resonant converter. The RGB bling comes from a 120 mm fan that features a white impeller that doubles up as an RGB LED diffuser, and LEDs located in its impeller hub. The OEM appears to be HEC. The PSU talks to software over an ARGB header, so it could interface with the iCUE RGB software. PC-Canada asks $85 USD (converted) for the 550 W variant, $100 USD for 650 W, and $110 USD for 750 W.
Sources:
Professional Review, PC-Canada
Under the hood, these PSUs offer single +12 V rail design, 80 Plus Bronze efficiency, active PFC, and LLC resonant converter. The RGB bling comes from a 120 mm fan that features a white impeller that doubles up as an RGB LED diffuser, and LEDs located in its impeller hub. The OEM appears to be HEC. The PSU talks to software over an ARGB header, so it could interface with the iCUE RGB software. PC-Canada asks $85 USD (converted) for the 550 W variant, $100 USD for 650 W, and $110 USD for 750 W.
35 Comments on Corsair Readies CX-F RGB Line of Entry-level PSUs Targeted at Gamers
Put a silent fan in your PSU, don't add RGB... jeeze... (spoken from a tired system builder).
Oh, and that RM650 PSU is $180 Canadian here in Sweden. ;)
And this advertorial... Entry level?? since when is $100 for a 650w classed as entry level?
This doesn't looks like a PSU build by CWT, it also isn't a PSU build by CWT. ;)
This is a Vengeance Silver with RGB fan build by HEC.
I'm sure some people without this understanding will spend over the odds for a lower-quality PSU that has rainbow lights, but those are the prices of better-made, more efficient 80+ Gold modular units.
I'd not expect to pay more than $60 for a 550W Silver PSU. $85 is 600W Gold or better territory.
Everything from Pure Power onwards is silent.
As for this Corsair, I really hope RGB is not an excuse for Corsair to sell outdated junk platforms marked up. Like some others do *cough*Thermaltake*cough*
But that's a whole other discussion and this is not the place so this is the last I will say about it.
But AFAIK you work for Corsair, so safe to assume you know best.
Well.. Ok... let's be fair. CORSAIR has much better equipment than Aris. :D
I've moved twice since quitting doing PSU reviews. I don't have ANY of my old equipment anymore. Bro... you're killing me with the "worse equipment" stuff. LOL!
I had the SM-8800 + SM-220. It was Wolf that had the TechRed.
We use this machine to compare competitor's fans and found that Noctua is among the worst for static pressure:
www.tweaktown.com/news/26799/corsair_takes_fan_testing_seriously/index.html
Noctua relies heavily on misleading marketing. They only show you CFM vs. RPM with dBA data and say, "look! We're quieter!", but they leave out the data for static pressure (meansured in Ps, or mmAq). A true PQ curve graph has THREE plot points. RPM, CFM and Ps. In "free air" (eg: case fan) you can use a Noctua fan at it will be adequate and quiet. But in an application that requires higher static pressure (eg PSU, radiator, etc.), the RPM of a Noctua fan needs to be cranked up so high that the "noise advantage" is completely negated.
So yeah... putting a Noctua in a PSU is putting a shitty fan in a PSU. I mean... there are worse fans used in some low end PSUs, sure. But the Noctua is NOT the best choice for a PSU.
Getting side tracked, this all started with me just wanting a totally silent bronze PSU (since in Canada right now the cheapest silent Gold is $150 which is a lot to spend on every computer you build. Sadly the Corsair CV and CX and Gigabyte models (all of them) have been very loud.
Also what is with PSUs coming with broken thermal regulators? I've had 3 this year that ran at max speed even on low loads. Gold PSUs. One Rosewill, one Cooler master, one Gigabyte one. That clearly isn't 20 db out of the box. I want more than 2 out of 3 PSUs I unbox to be quality... under $150...
I basically just buy the RM650/X everytime I want problem free, but that cost adds up.