@Aris
The manufacturers call them "Low Power Low Offset Voltage Dual Comparators", so it's apropriate to at least use some of that and also call them dual voltage comperators and not opamps...
It's what they are there for and used for...
About semi fanless:
Why is it so important for that?!
If the efficiency is so high, than the PSU does not nead a high rpm fan, so the fan can run pretty slow...
Why should the semi fanless mode be important? I don't see any advantages of that.
Especially after seeing some manufacturers representative saying 'we do not need high quality fans, we have semi fanless'...
Especially after you've taken a look at the HardOCP review of the older RM750 from chiconey, you should come to the conclusion that it's not always the best solution...
Because you have some hotspots and depending on the position of the PSU, it's possible that the OTP kicks in before the fan starts spinning.
Not the best thing in the world.
And there is also the problem of the PSU operating in the area where the fan just starts spinning. In this case, the fan starts spinning for a couple of seconds and then stops for a couple of seconds. And people find this quite annoying.
Normal PSUs do not have this kind of problem and there are already some pretty quiet PSUs out there you can barely notice besides them not having a semi fanless mode.
For a PSU in the 1500W range, I may agree with you.
But in the 800W range not...
Even my rather oldish Dark Power Pro P8 is pretty quiet at low loads. Though that PSU has something modern PSUs often lack: Heatsinks.
So in the end, semi fanless is more something on the marketing side and not something useful - at least unless you go for 1500W monsters and such....
Also I've been told that the semi fanless operation makes a PSU more expansive.
For what exactly? That you can disguise shitty fans?
Why not just using a decent, low noise fan with a quality bearing??