Monday, February 21st 2022

Gigabyte Launches UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 Power Supply

Gigabyte Technology Co. Ltd, a leading manufacturer of premium gaming hardware, today announced the new UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 power supply, which supports the latest PCIe Gen 5.0 graphics cards. The UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 has a 16-pin connector and comes with a high-quality native 16-pin cable, allowing it to support the latest PCIe Gen 5.0 graphics cards. The 16-pin cable supports up to 600 watts of power to the graphics card making it ready for the future high-end graphics cards. The UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 power supply inherits the spirit of Gigabyte Ultra Durable product design, introducing a variety of high-quality materials and technologies. Not only it is the best choice for high-end gamers and overclockers, but it is also ready for the next-gen graphics card.

The UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 power supply supports the PCIe Gen 5.0 graphics cards and it is capable to deliver the increasing power that the high-end graphics card demand. Traditional power supplies need a three 8-pin to 16-pin adapters to support the latest PCIe Gen 5.0 graphics cards. The new UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 power supply needs only a single 16-pin cable to directly supply power to the PCIe Gen 5.0 graphics cards. Moreover, the PCIe Gen 5.0 16-pin cable provides up to 600 watts of power to the graphics card, but it also simplifies the number of cables, significantly reducing the cable clutter, making the graphics card installation easier and it helps with the airflow in the chassis. In addition, the UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 also provides four PCIe 8-pins for the graphics cards, so it can meet the needs of current or next-generation high-end graphics cards at the same time.
The UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 power supply inherits the spirit of Gigabyte Ultra Durable product design, introducing a variety of high-quality materials and designs. Ultra Durable design combines high-quality main Japanese capacitors, enhanced thermal solution, 120 mm smart hydraulic bearing (HYB) fan, and six circuit protection designs. Moreover, it provides users with high-quality and stable power delivery, and it can be used for a long time. In addition, the UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 power supply also features 80 PLUS Gold certification, fully modular design and compact design. It is the best choice for high-end gamers and overclockers.

Gigabyte launches the UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 to support PCIe Gen 5.0 graphics cards. It meets the needs of current and future high-end graphics cards, but also provides high-quality and stable power in accordance with Gigabyte's quality requirements for UD series products. Users can enjoy a high-quality gaming experience with peace of mind, and it is the best choice for assembling a computer system.
Source: Gigabyte
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54 Comments on Gigabyte Launches UD1000GM PCIE 5.0 Power Supply

#51
Valantar
kiriakostFeel free to inform the guy with the long hair, him to read first the PSU testing device User Manual.
Because in the end of the day, he is not qualifying receiving answers from REAL electronic engineers.
Neither any REAL electrician engineer, or industrial one, he is obligated to teach basics, at YouTube Bloggers.

Gigabyte aren't saints but neither devils.
I am not going to contribute any further, so this full of Helium balloon to get larger.

At my avatar, I am using my real face, because I am not anonymous.
All my point of views they are signed with ink too.
Wait, what? Have I said that Gigabyte are "devils"? I said they messed up their reputation by grossly mishandling what could otherwise have been a relatively routine manufacturing fuckup. They made their own bed by not just accepting that these products were inherently flawed and should never have been put on sale.

Also, about those last two lines ... what? Who cares? What's the point your'e trying to make? Last I checked, this discussion wasn't about you.

As for the first, while there are absolutely far more qualified PSU test engineers out there than Patrick at GN, he's still plenty qualified in this case. While they didn't actually identify the root cause of the issue, they still singled out the behaviour and specific misconfiguration of protections that leads to it failing (though it bears mentioning that a lot of users report these failing without ever coming close to triggering OPP). Identifying the root cause design flaw isn't necessary on their part - all that's required is to show that this is reproducible and isn't limited to a few units. Which they did, in a professional and unbiased fashion. (Oh, and AFAIK Steve aka. "the guy wuith the long hair" at GN doesn't have anything to do with the actual PSU testing.)
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#52
R-T-B
kiriakostDo you know of what the Long Service badge translates to? That I know well the background of most regular ones.
And the only expert that I can trust this is me.
Dude I'm getting real tired of your 'I'm an expert, no one else can weigh in" shenanigans. Didn't you literally try to pull this on crmaris, who has more degrees in electrical science than I have beard hairs, and is also our PSU reviewer?
Posted on Reply
#53
Valantar
kiriakostDo you know of what the Long Service badge translates to?
Yes. It means that you've been a member of these forums for ten years. That, and absolutely nothing else. Contrary to what a lot of people like to think, neither age nor exposure necessarily lead to wisdom.
kiriakostAnd the only expert that I can trust this is me.
And this attitude just makes me question why you're even on a forum to beign with. Isn't this a place to discuss things? So far all I've seen you do is misrepresent the arguments of others and shit on quality journalism because you seemingly don't like that it's on youtube or that the presenter can be a bit obnoxious. Which ... well, you do you. Just don't expect the rest of us to keep quiet about it.
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