You seem like the daft one. He said will only buy from brands that make their own high quality PSUs. Seasonic makes their own, as well as Super Flower... and they both sell them branded as their own products - which are the ones he buys (myself included).
Let me simplify it for you. Don't buy rebranded PSU's from companies who just throw their labels on products - buy from those who make their own.
Not... True.....
Blind ignorance is truly bliss.
You must have missed who was responding to this thread. Otherwise, you would not have assumed I don't know what I'm talking about. I know that has an air of arrogance to it, but for Christ's sake there's just as many assumptions made by people in this discussion thread than are made in the article itself.
Super Flower does the same thing for their own branded products than they do for everyone else. Their factory has one line which limits their output capability. They will OFTEN outsource. Not only for their clients, but for their own branded product.
And Seasonic isn't too different. They have outsourced on many occasion (more often for their own products than for whomever they're building products for) and, like Super Flower, don't do their own PCBA. PCBA can come from one of a dozen other factories.
I would actually RATHER buy a product from a factory that doesn't nearly everything in house from PCBA to magnetics to final assembly. Better quality control is achieved overall when you're not chasing down issues happening at a dozen different sub assembly factories.
Buying from a company that slaps their own label on a product versus someone else's means NOTHING. NOTHING. It has ZERO IMPACT on HOW the product is made. ZERO.
You guys talk you know how this stuff works... but clearly none of you actually do.
^^^ By far best list out there.
But remember: Simply knowing the OEM doesn't tell you much. The product could be a particular factory's design, but you don't know who did the PCBA or the assembly. And even if it is a bigger factory that does everything in house, those bigger factories have multiple lines with equipment of varying age and capability. The same factory that can put out top notch stuff can put out absolute crap simply because an older line was the only one available for a last minute rush order or because another line was down for maintenance or training.
Any way... Going back to the article.
Here are the facts:
We don't know who built Jeremy's (jonnyguru.com) sample. We don't know who made Aris's. Assumptions were made because Super Flower frequently outsources due to limited output capability. This is not an uncommon practice for smaller factories that only have one or two lines. This isn't news.
We don't know if Aris's PSU's blew up due to quality issues or poor design. Frankly, Jeremy's sample could have blown up just the same IF he had tested the same way. He did not. For all we know, Aris could have had a beautifully soldered sample direct from the Super Flower engineering lab, did his OPP test and it would have blown up just the same.
The only "conspiracy" here is that a lot of companies will "cherry pick" review samples and will withhold from sending review samples to certain reviewers if they know that particular reviewer's methodology may expose a products weaknesses. But this is not new and is hardly news. HardOCP jumped on reporting this originally because they like to make it a frequent practice (and a good one at that) to buy review samples from retail and championed around Seasonic's decision to ship reviewers samples directly from retail by "breaking" that "exclusive" news as well. That's what this is. Nothing more.