Wednesday, June 5th 2024

InWin Shows Off a 2500 W Power Supply, Plus AIO Coolers, Modular Fans and Cases at Computex

Here at Computex 2024, InWin debuts the new PII Platinum series of ATX 3.1 power supplies with its top-of-the-line 2500 W model, also adding new models to the VE series (80 Plus Gold) fully modular power supplies with wattage up to 1300 W. Alongside we spotted various builds around the ModFree Mini (Mod-III) systems featuring Mini-ITX motherboards running AMD Ryzen 7 8700G processors, and its new small form factor workstation, F3, featuring NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 SUPER Founders Edition graphics cards. InWin also introduced Lynx fully modular case fans with Type-C connectivity, and several liquid cooling solutions available in 360 mm and 240 mm variants.

InWin PII Platinum 2500 W PSU (1600 W model also available) is as its name says, an 80 Plus Platinum certified power supply, fully compliant with the newest generation (ATX 3.1) of Intel's PSDG. It is built using Japanese aluminium electrolytic capacitors and features a 135 mm double ball bearing fan with < 25 dB(A) at a 50% PSU load. It offers 1x 24 pin, 2x 8 (4 + 4) CPU, 5x 8 (6 + 2) PCI-E, 4x 12V-2x6, and 12 SATA connectors while having a 10-year warranty.
The newly released InWin VE series features two 80 Plus Gold certified power supplies, the VE105 (1050 W), and VE125 (1250 W), with 5 years warranty. Both meet ATX 3.1 standards, are fully modular, and come equipped with a silent < 25 dB(A) 120 mm fan with smart temperature control. Connectivity wise we have 1x 24 pin, 2x 8 (4 + 4) CPU, 3x 8 (6 + 2) PCI-E, 1x 12V-2x6, 3x 4 pin, and 9x SATA connectors.

A new series of modular fans was unveiled by InWin, under the name Lynx, this series offers 120 mm / 140 mm fans in black and white variants, with turbine blade design, noise levels between 17.2-25.5 dB(A), ARGB lighting, and Type-C Side-by-Side linking.
The newest addition to InWin's AIO cooling solutions (AR24 / AR36) is available in 240 mm and 360 mm variants, black and white color scheme, and features an integrated screen displaying real-time temperatures or animations on the CPU block. Alternatively, the InWin AR36/AR24 incorporates an ARGB-infused cooling block and bundles with Neptune cooling fans.

InWin also showcased a full range of systems built around its ModFree (Cube, Mini, Stretch) and F3 cases, using different hardware platforms and cooling solutions.
Add your own comment

9 Comments on InWin Shows Off a 2500 W Power Supply, Plus AIO Coolers, Modular Fans and Cases at Computex

#1
Hyderz
That looks like a seasonic psu
Posted on Reply
#2
ExcuseMeWtf
Doesn't it require a separate circuit in the house at that point on 100-120 VAC?
Posted on Reply
#3
P4-630
HyderzThat looks like a seasonic psu
With just half of the warranty then....
Posted on Reply
#4
Philaphlous
This would require at minimum a 20A 120V outlet, probably more like 25A breaker... 12 or 10awg romex to deal with the voltage drop and to be code. 240V would be way more reasonable but who the heck is plugging in their PC with the same plug as a dryer plug...

Maybe they collaborated with Intel on this...you know to power those power hungry intel chips. The intel fanboiz will love this! lol
Posted on Reply
#5
Ruru
S.T.A.R.S.
PhilaphlousThis would require at minimum a 20A 120V outlet, probably more like 25A breaker... 12 or 10awg romex to deal with the voltage drop and to be code. 240V would be way more reasonable but who the heck is plugging in their PC with the same plug as a dryer plug...

Maybe they collaborated with Intel on this...you know to power those power hungry intel chips. The intel fanboiz will love this! lol
And having multiple GPUs for AI or compute stuff etc.

A normal user won't need a PSU even near of this level.
Posted on Reply
#6
DR4G00N
Philaphlous240V would be way more reasonable but who the heck is plugging in their PC with the same plug as a dryer plug...
There are normal sized 240V 15A outlets too btw...

I mean @ 2500W you'll need to wire a new outlet anyway so you might as well just go 240V for the extra efficiency.
Posted on Reply
#7
Guwapo77
I mean since I am getting a 5090 AIO...2400W be just enough.
Posted on Reply
#8
boomheadshot8
Buy this if you want a 5090 :kookoo:
It's good in winter you don't need a heater :rolleyes:
Posted on Reply
#9
Guwapo77
boomheadshot8Buy this if you want a 5090 :kookoo:
It's good in winter you don't need a heater :rolleyes:
Win win!
Posted on Reply
Nov 21st, 2024 03:53 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts