Thank you for the fast and detailed reply!
there is quite a headroom even for some, short, overvoltages.
I was rather worried about some persistent overvoltages, that might (perhaps?) develop in the long lifetime of a PSU (which I feel to be 5-7 years for a good PSU.. I'd probably replace or maybe recap(?) it after that period to stay on the safe side..). Like some malfunction in the feedback loop or somethiing, that could maybe lead it to outputting persistent 14V on the +12V rail, for example
OVP at 13.4V would save the day
So I am actually happy to read, that you
never encountered a PSU that reached dangerous voltage levels .. Usually they blow before they overvolt components.
I think that is kind of sweet
Speaking of ripple - yeah.. that is the tricky way of applying non-spec voltages to the components... I did recognize that as a crucial factor, but since there is no explicit protection against "overripple", i decided that the best (and only?) way to protect against it is to pick a PSU with 1) very good initial ripple suppression (as per your reviews, for example
) 2) Japanese 105°C caps (because I am under the impression that bad caps are what can cause "overripple" in a PSU which initially had good ripple suppression). Plus, providing the best thermal environment for the PSU.. within reason, that is
I'm considering drilling some holes in the bottom of my PC case to let it actually get that <25°C outside air for cooling... If extra 10°C slice capacitor life by half, it actually can be very important to give it the coolest available air to breathe... Perhaps similar reasoning could be used to justify more efficient PSUs..? Although their fan profiles are generally much more relaxed, so...
testing at high ambient is crucial, especially for a PSU.
Yeah, it's great that there are such wonderful reviewers, like yourself, who can do and do that proper testing. It is a really time consuming task though, I imagine, so one can't get all the interesting PSUs reviewed..
That phrase of your's also reminded me, how you always keep saying how you believe OTP to be a crucial protection in a PSU. I also feel that leaving out OTP is not a good practice overall.. which is why I favor Seasonic-branded units over the Corsair-branded ones.. Corsair seems to have different beliefs about OTP. Although these new AXi's do have it..coupled with cosmic price, especially for my region...
I wonder if you could give a brief comment about why you believe OTP to be so important?