Wednesday, January 31st 2024

FSP PSU Lineup Ready for RTX 40 SUPER Series GPUs with Native 12VHPWR

Leading power supply manufacturer FSP Group proudly announces its PSU lineup now features native 12VHPWR connectors, fully prepared to harness the power of NVIDIA's RTX 4080 SUPER, RTX 4070 Ti SUPER, and RTX 4070 SUPER graphics cards. For a truly supercharged experience, FSP PSUs go beyond compatibility. They're fully compliant with both ATX 3.0 and PCIe 5.0 regulations, boasting support for 2x total power excursion and 3x GPU power excursion. This ensures unleashing the full potential of these new GPUs without breaking a sweat.

Explore the FSP ATX 3.0 & PCIe 5.0 PSU range, starting from 750 W, and find the perfect match for your RTX 40 SUPER Series.
Source: FSP Group
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12 Comments on FSP PSU Lineup Ready for RTX 40 SUPER Series GPUs with Native 12VHPWR

#2
Vayra86
wNotyarD12VHPWR? Not 12V-2x6?
They'll supply an adapter for that...

:roll: :toast:

Oh man. I can't even get to grips with the amount of fail that coincides with a simple connector. And then you have jokers saying 'this is fine'. I guess the bar is very low then. Wow. Just wow.
Posted on Reply
#3
R-T-B
wNotyarD12VHPWR? Not 12V-2x6?
All new FSP PSUs are coming with 12V-2x6. They are likely just calling it 12VHPWR to make sure people not on the bleeding edge of tech are not confused.
Posted on Reply
#4
user556
Labelling it as using the flawed plug just adds uncertainty! It's begging for more complaints and negative comments.
Posted on Reply
#5
R-T-B
user556Labelling it as using the flawed plug just adds uncertainty! It's begging for more complaints and negative comments.
I'm 99% certain you'd get more complaints from confused laymen otherwise. We aren't the majority here.
Posted on Reply
#6
wNotyarD
R-T-BI'm 99% certain you'd get more complaints from confused laymen otherwise. We aren't the majority here.
I'd guess laymen would see "PCI-e 5.0 ready", "ATX 3.1 compliant" or "RTX 4000 compatible" printed on the box, buy it and follow along with their lives. Whatever the connector is named doesn't matter for laymen.
Posted on Reply
#7
R-T-B
wNotyarDI'd guess laymen would see "PCI-e 5.0 ready", "ATX 3.1 compliant" or "RTX 4000 compatible" printed on the box, buy it and follow along with their lives. Whatever the connector is named doesn't matter for laymen.
*shrugs* It's what they are doing either way. And they aren't alone.
Posted on Reply
#8
Chomiq
"We swear it won't melt. Maybe? Probably? Hopefully?"
Posted on Reply
#9
user556
R-T-BI'm 99% certain you'd get more complaints from confused laymen otherwise. We aren't the majority here.
We are the laymen and majority when it comes to assembling of PC hardware.
Posted on Reply
#10
R-T-B
user556We are the laymen and majority when it comes to assembling of PC hardware.
There are laymen assemblers too, and I'd argue thats what this targets.
Posted on Reply
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