Thursday, January 5th 2023

ADATA XPG PSUs: Fusion Titanium, Cybercore II Platinum and Core Reactor II Gold

ADATA in its exhibition on the sidelines of CES, showed off the Fusion 1600 TITANIUM, an enthusiast-segment 1600 W PSU for highly overclocked PC builds. Designed in collaboration with Delta Electronics (popular for server PSUs and laptop power bricks), the Fusion TITANIUM uses GaNFETs and a planar transformer in its switching circuitry, and is Cybenetics Titanium and 80 Plus Titanium certified. The PSU complies with both ATX 3.0 and PCIe Gen 5 specs for excursion tolerance.

The XPG Fusion 1600 TITANIUM offers two native 16-pin ATX 12VHPWR connectors that are each capable of 600 W continuous power delivery, with 200% excursions within specified limits. You also get at least twelve 6+2 pin PCIe power connectors, and multiple 4+4 pin EPS. A USB 2.0 connection interfaces the PSU with software, with a dedicated UWP app giving you real-time monitoring and data-logging for the PSU.
ADATA also developed newer versions of its XPG Cybercore and Core Reactor PSUs with ATX 3.0 + PCIe Gen 5 conformance and native 12VHPWR connectors. The Cybercore II Platinum, as its name suggests, offers 80 Plus Platinum and Cybenetics Platinum switching efficiency. It also offers Cybenetics A++ acoustics thanks to a Nidec Gentle Typhoon fan. The Cybercore II Platinum offers a single 12VHPWR connector delivering 600 W continuous and excursion tolerance meeting the PCIe Gen 5 specs. It comes in wattage-based variants of 1000 W and 1300 W. The XPG Core Reactor II Gold is a more mainstream-segment offering by ADATA, available in wattage variants of 750 W and 850 W, meeting ATX 3.0 and PCIe Gen 5 specs, and offering 80 Plus Gold switching efficiency. You get one native 600 W 12VHPWR connector.
Add your own comment

8 Comments on ADATA XPG PSUs: Fusion Titanium, Cybercore II Platinum and Core Reactor II Gold

#1
MachineLearning
Fusion 1600 TITANIUM, an enthusiast-segment 1600 W PSU for highly overclocked PC builds. Designed in collaboration with Delta Electronics
Wow, it's been a long time since I've seen a Delta PSU for consumers. And Gentle Typhoons?! :clap: @crmaris Are you looking to get one for review? :)
Posted on Reply
#2
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
MachineLearningWow, it's been a long time since I've seen a Delta PSU for consumers. And Gentle Typhoons?! :clap: @crmaris Are you looking to get one for review? :)
Better be lol
Posted on Reply
#3
Redwoodz
Yes, finally some excitement in psu's. Seasonic needs some competition.
Posted on Reply
#4
MachineLearning
RedwoodzYes, finally some excitement in psu's. Seasonic needs some competition.
Well, we already have CWT and Super Flower, but more competitors here is nice. :)
Posted on Reply
#5
ZoneDymo
RedwoodzYes, finally some excitement in psu's. Seasonic needs some competition.
eh do they though? their prices seem fair and they dont seem to be standing still.
Also they still have plenty of competition from the Corsair ax1600i

But quality PSU is better for the world in general so I can only encourage it.
I will once again say that we need to move the goal post so what is rated platinum now will be "mere" silver later and 80+ bronze should not even be allowed to be sold anymore, push better stuff!
Posted on Reply
#7
Jism
TheLostSwedeSpecs for those interested.

12 years warranty. I love it.

I still run on a Antec Truepower 750W. Its bin robust all these years since i bought it. And that must have bin 7+ years ago now.

Handled a FX8320 @ 4.8Ghz with a 3x 270 and later 3x 580's in Crossfire.
Posted on Reply
#8
crmaris
MachineLearningWow, it's been a long time since I've seen a Delta PSU for consumers. And Gentle Typhoons?! :clap: @crmaris Are you looking to get one for review? :)
ofc :)
Posted on Reply
Dec 19th, 2024 13:02 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts