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I'm not an IT person or computer expert. I am considering a Lenovo ThinkStation P300 Tower with the following configuration (Windows 7):
Xeon E3-1241 v3 (8MB Cache, 3.50GHz)
8GB PC3 1600MHz uDIMM
NVIDIA Quadro K420 1GB (DVI+DP)
16x DVD +/- RW DL Win 7 only
2.5" 256GB SATA SolidState Drive
3.5" 2TB SATA HDD 7200 rpm
The P300 is available with these two different power supplies (under the "Form Factor" section on the configuration page):
Tower with Intel C226, 280W 85% [included in price]
Tower with Intel C226, 450W 92% [add $50 US]
Should I get the 280 W or the 450 W power supply?
I asked that question to two Lenovo reps, separately, and I got these answers.
You will want the 450W power supply if you ever plan to make any upgrades such as a higher end graphics card. The 280W is pretty small and cannot handle upgrades much past the base specs. If your configuration on lenovo.com requires more power, it will default to the 450W.
The short answer is that the configurator (online) shouldn't allow you to configure the system with a PSU that is not sufficient to support the configuration. Generally, the 280W is sufficient for most configs. The 450W comes with a 6 pin aux graphics power cable that is capable of supporting up to a K4200 card in the tower. The K4200 card is rated at 108W, so it requires additional 12V power beyond what the PCIe slot provides in order to function.
I'm not sure if those two answers are completely in agreement or not. On the one hand, I would like the option to upgrade down the road (e.g., additional memory, additional hard drives, perhaps an additional optical drive). On the other hand, I do not expect to upgrade the graphics card, at least not to something as expensive as the Quadro K4200.
When I use Lenovo's online configurator and load up a P300 with some top specs (Xeon E3-1281 v3, four 8 GB sticks of ECC RAM, two 4 TB HDDs, two Bluray drives, and even the Quadro K2200), the 280 W PSU is still an option. It's only when I select the Quadro K4200 that the configurator forces me to choose the 450 W. So I'm not entirely confident.
So I decided to try Cooler Master's wattage calculator for the system I mentioned at the top of this post (Xeon E3-1241 v3, 8 GB non-ECC RAM, Quadro K420, DVD RW drive, 256 GB SSD, 2 TB HDD). I think that the Xeon E3-1241 v3 is FCLGA1150, so I selected "LGA1150". Cooler Master doesn't have the Quadro K420 (45 W max) listed as an option, so I chose a card from their list with a similar wattage (Quadro K600: 41 W max). And, "the Oscar goes to ..."
... Cooler Master tells me that I will need a minimum PSU of 272 W. I realize there may be some "fudge factor" included in the calculation, but still, that's awfully close to 280 W, it seems. Another thing is that my existing computer, a desktop from 2007 by another manufacturer, has a 375 W PSU. I don't want to "downgrade," if that's the right word.
So, what are my options? Do you have any advice?
I guess one option is to just go with the 280 W, but wouldn't I be risking unexpected shutdowns and general wear and tear?
Another option is to go with the 450 W, which is probably a lot more than I need. Since it is oversized for my purpose, it might run inefficiently and cost more power from the wall. Are there other risks associated with a too big PSU?
One other question I have is, which option would lead to a hotter (or at least noisier, due to fans running more) machine: a too small PSU or a too big PSU? I'd like to keep the temperature and noise down in the room as much as possible.
Thanks so much for your time and patience.
Xeon E3-1241 v3 (8MB Cache, 3.50GHz)
8GB PC3 1600MHz uDIMM
NVIDIA Quadro K420 1GB (DVI+DP)
16x DVD +/- RW DL Win 7 only
2.5" 256GB SATA SolidState Drive
3.5" 2TB SATA HDD 7200 rpm
The P300 is available with these two different power supplies (under the "Form Factor" section on the configuration page):
Tower with Intel C226, 280W 85% [included in price]
Tower with Intel C226, 450W 92% [add $50 US]
Should I get the 280 W or the 450 W power supply?
I asked that question to two Lenovo reps, separately, and I got these answers.
You will want the 450W power supply if you ever plan to make any upgrades such as a higher end graphics card. The 280W is pretty small and cannot handle upgrades much past the base specs. If your configuration on lenovo.com requires more power, it will default to the 450W.
The short answer is that the configurator (online) shouldn't allow you to configure the system with a PSU that is not sufficient to support the configuration. Generally, the 280W is sufficient for most configs. The 450W comes with a 6 pin aux graphics power cable that is capable of supporting up to a K4200 card in the tower. The K4200 card is rated at 108W, so it requires additional 12V power beyond what the PCIe slot provides in order to function.
I'm not sure if those two answers are completely in agreement or not. On the one hand, I would like the option to upgrade down the road (e.g., additional memory, additional hard drives, perhaps an additional optical drive). On the other hand, I do not expect to upgrade the graphics card, at least not to something as expensive as the Quadro K4200.
When I use Lenovo's online configurator and load up a P300 with some top specs (Xeon E3-1281 v3, four 8 GB sticks of ECC RAM, two 4 TB HDDs, two Bluray drives, and even the Quadro K2200), the 280 W PSU is still an option. It's only when I select the Quadro K4200 that the configurator forces me to choose the 450 W. So I'm not entirely confident.
So I decided to try Cooler Master's wattage calculator for the system I mentioned at the top of this post (Xeon E3-1241 v3, 8 GB non-ECC RAM, Quadro K420, DVD RW drive, 256 GB SSD, 2 TB HDD). I think that the Xeon E3-1241 v3 is FCLGA1150, so I selected "LGA1150". Cooler Master doesn't have the Quadro K420 (45 W max) listed as an option, so I chose a card from their list with a similar wattage (Quadro K600: 41 W max). And, "the Oscar goes to ..."
... Cooler Master tells me that I will need a minimum PSU of 272 W. I realize there may be some "fudge factor" included in the calculation, but still, that's awfully close to 280 W, it seems. Another thing is that my existing computer, a desktop from 2007 by another manufacturer, has a 375 W PSU. I don't want to "downgrade," if that's the right word.
So, what are my options? Do you have any advice?
I guess one option is to just go with the 280 W, but wouldn't I be risking unexpected shutdowns and general wear and tear?
Another option is to go with the 450 W, which is probably a lot more than I need. Since it is oversized for my purpose, it might run inefficiently and cost more power from the wall. Are there other risks associated with a too big PSU?
One other question I have is, which option would lead to a hotter (or at least noisier, due to fans running more) machine: a too small PSU or a too big PSU? I'd like to keep the temperature and noise down in the room as much as possible.
Thanks so much for your time and patience.