Wednesday, August 10th 2022

The MSI MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 is the World's First ATX 3.0 Compliant PSU with 600 W PCIe Connector

MSI welcomes the MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 power supply unit, the world's first power supply unit to be fully ready for ATX 3.0 and PCIe 5.0. With graphics cards becoming all the more important, users must know what components to buy for their system if they are looking to upgrade. To understand why the MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 is the ultimate future-proof power supply unit, let's begin with understanding ATX 3.0.

ATX 3.0 is Intel's new specification standard for existing PSUs. In short, ATX 3.0's main purpose is to help provide more reliability, and better power efficiency and provide graphics cards up to 600 watts of power. ATX 3.0 is created in response to graphics cards' increase in performance and the ever-increasing need for power. ATX 3.0 puts heavy emphasis on power excursions to make sure high-performance graphics cards can be sustained and your system can remain stable. Thanks to ATX 3.0 there is now an increase in efficiency while idling and a new power connector is added to help achieve all the above. ATX 3.0 added a new PCIe 5.0 12VHPWR connector that features 12+4 pins instead of the traditional 6 or 8. With the new PCIe 5.0 connector, the power supply and cable can supply up to 600 watts of power.
Fully Ready for PCIe 5.0 and ATX 3.0
Many power supply units on the market today don't fully support ATX 3.0 yet. Many will require an adapter that connects the three or four 8-pin PCIe connectors to the single PCIe 5.0 12VHPWR connector. It is also challenging to figure out where to plug the adapters. MSI's MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 power supply units are fully compliant with PCIe 5.0 and ATX 3.0. With a native 16 PIN (12VHPWR) PCIe connector the MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 is ready for all high-performing future graphics cards. It can freely pipe up to 600W of power to PCIe 5.0 graphics cards. To withstand higher currents needed by the graphics cards or CPU, the MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 power supply units' connectors utilize copper alloy terminals for better safety.


Everything Is Legit and Backed By Testing
According to PCI-SIG, graphics cards are capable of exceeding their maximum power by 3 times. This is especially the case for high-performance graphics cards such as the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 Ti or the upcoming NVIDIA next-gen graphics cards. It is believed that the upcoming graphics cards need 600 W of power and will have power excursions up to 1800 W. The power excursions only last 100 microseconds but can already heavily disrupt the computer system. Power excursions are also known as power spikes by many people.

Intel Testing Requirements
MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 Testing Result
From the chart below you can see that the MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 can safely achieve 2x total power excursion at 200% of the PSU wattage while meeting all the standards of Intel Testing Requirements at 120%, 160%, and 180% as well. The voltage of MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 can be controlled within the allowable voltage range when the current changes rapidly and violently to maintain the system stability and avoid system abnormalities.
OPP and OCP Maintained for Maximum Safety
It is important to keep in mind that some power supply units may find a way around the power spikes by lifting the threshold for OPP and OCP. This is not the case for the MEG Ai1300P PCIE5. As shown in the chart below, the MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 maintains the OPP level of 1300 W x 1.25 at 1623.55 W.
Power Supply Timing Values Is A Pass
To be fully compliant with ATX 3.0, there's also a timing value that the power supply unit must meet. The MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 is fully compliant with that timing value as shown in the chart below.
With future high-performing graphics cards slowly approaching us, it's all the more important for users to be prepared if they're expecting to upgrade their systems. The MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 is the perfect power supply unit for users who look to upgrade to high-performing components due to its full compliance with ATX 3.0 and PCIe 5.0.
Source: MSI
Add your own comment

44 Comments on The MSI MEG Ai1300P PCIE5 is the World's First ATX 3.0 Compliant PSU with 600 W PCIe Connector

#1
DeeJay1001
Do we need a 600w connector? Are GPUs realistically going to pull 600W? If so I dont want it. Even 300w in an add-in card already requires 3 fans and a 3+ slot thick cooler to keep temps and noise within reason.
Posted on Reply
#2
Avlin
but I would like 4 GPU, why just 1 connector ?
Posted on Reply
#3
freeagent
DeeJay1001Are GPUs realistically going to pull 600W?
Supposedly.. maybe even more..
Posted on Reply
#4
Bomby569
Being a proud owner of a Fermi card, i say this is all fine.
Posted on Reply
#5
Timelessest
I want to see an itx version. That would be an something worthy to brag about, not an atx.
Posted on Reply
#6
Blaeza
I want to see the price. And is this basically for the 4090/Ti?
Posted on Reply
#7
bonehead123
Sooo... all this techno-babble about being "ready for the nex-gen this or the other" blah blah blah, so wtf is with that antiquated crapwarez mini-usb port ?
Posted on Reply
#8
Toothless
Tech, Games, and TPU!
DeeJay1001Do we need a 600w connector? Are GPUs realistically going to pull 600W? If so I dont want it. Even 300w in an add-in card already requires 3 fans and a 3+ slot thick cooler to keep temps and noise within reason.
We're already there, honestly.
Posted on Reply
#9
delshay
freeagentSupposedly.. maybe even more..
It's going to put out a lot of heat. Let's see how 600w GPU is going to be cooled in a normal PC case..
Posted on Reply
#10
maxfly
Let's see what Aris has to say about it.
Posted on Reply
#11
TheinsanegamerN
DeeJay1001Do we need a 600w connector? Are GPUs realistically going to pull 600W? If so I dont want it. Even 300w in an add-in card already requires 3 fans and a 3+ slot thick cooler to keep temps and noise within reason.
600w is a meme. The 3090ti can spike to 550w for short burts, but does not maintain that level of draw. This has been expanded into "future GPUs will be 600/700/900 watt". Nobody can explain exactly how one would cool such a GPU though.
Posted on Reply
#14
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
bonehead123Sooo... all this techno-babble about being "ready for the nex-gen this or the other" blah blah blah, so wtf is with that antiquated crapwarez mini-usb port ?
It's for the monitoring. It's not for endless reconnections, you plug it when you install the PSU. MiniUSB is fine for the purpose.
Posted on Reply
#15
Dirt Chip
I see no fundamental problem with 600w+ gpu for consumer market because as always- if it is too expensive, too much power or no real improvement then just don't buy.

As for MSI ATX 3.0- bravo to them. Will be interesting to see the reviews.

Just remember- this whole ATX3.0 thing carry an early adopters tax both in $$$ and in childhood peoblems...
Posted on Reply
#16
Wirko
In the US, if you have 240 volts split-phase in your home, are computers still always on 120 volts?
Posted on Reply
#17
Tulatin
WirkoIn the US, if you have 240 volts split-phase in your home, are computers still always on 120 volts?
Yup.

You could /theoretically/ wire a wall socket as 240V, but you might want to take some pains to remember that it's not 120V.

It's also probably hilariously not to code.
Posted on Reply
#18
Wirko
TulatinYup.

You could /theoretically/ wire a wall socket as 240V, but you might want to take some pains to remember that it's not 120V.

It's also probably hilariously not to code.
No, no, no. That's certainly not what I mean. I mean proper 240V sockets and plugs.

But I don't know what the code says about the IEC plugs/sockets, those are of the same type (C13/C14) on PSUs all over the world, regardless of voltage.
Posted on Reply
#19
ppn
I resent how they snuck this 4 pin under, should have used normal style pins. to the right side in line with the others, with thinner cables if needed.
I don't believe 12 pin can carry 600 W safely without getting very very hot. No way. best limit it to 400 W before people start returning melted 12VHPWR connectors en masse
BlaezaI want to see the price. And is this basically for the 4090/Ti?
This covers only 1/2 of the needs. see. 800 watt, basically you need 2 of those. That PSU is already inadequate.
Posted on Reply
#21
Why_Me
WirkoNo, no, no. That's certainly not what I mean. I mean proper 240V sockets and plugs.

But I don't know what the code says about the IEC plugs/sockets, those are of the same type (C13/C14) on PSUs all over the world, regardless of voltage.
We have 220V plugins if required.

Posted on Reply
#22
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
WirkoIn the US, if you have 240 volts split-phase in your home, are computers still always on 120 volts?
203-250VAC go to electric ovens, microwaves, water heaters, central hvac via 2 hot lines and a neutral, some are 2 hots, neutral and ground. The division to 120 relies on the breaker used
Posted on Reply
#23
bonehead123
eidairaman1203-250VAC go to electric ovens, microwaves, water heaters, central hvac via 2 hot lines and a neutral, some are 2 hots, neutral and ground. The division to 120 relies on the breaker used
Although I've neva seen a normal, consumer microwave that has or needed moar than 110/120v, the rest of your statement is accurate, at least for the US anyways.......

However, the 203-250v lines going to stoves, water heaters ect are normally sized as "10-3" as in 2x 10ga hots + neutral + ground, as opposed to "12-2" which only has 1 hot lead + ground + neutral....
Posted on Reply
#24
TheinsanegamerN
WirkoIn the US, if you have 240 volts split-phase in your home, are computers still always on 120 volts?
Because 99.9% of home appliances are 120v, and have been for over a century. to switch to 240v would be a major undertaking, requiring rewiring hundreds of millions of buildings, and replacing or converting many times more appliances already in use.

Same reason the UK still drives on the left when the rest of the world drives on the right.
Posted on Reply
#25
Fangio1951
TheinsanegamerNBecause 99.9% of home appliances are 120v, and have been for over a century. to switch to 240v would be a major undertaking, requiring rewiring hundreds of millions of buildings, and replacing or converting many times more appliances already in use.

Same reason the UK still drives on the left when the rest of the world drives on the right.
when the rest of the world drives on the right. = WRONG !!

In OZ we drive on the left as well.
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Nov 21st, 2024 11:45 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts