Short warranty does not mean that unit have poor reliability. The warranty is like insurance: they sell PSU with 2 year warranty for 50€ and if they want to, they could sell the same PSU with 5 year warranty for 65€. So that is why if PSU warranty is two years, that doesn't mean that it have worse components which blow up at the end of warranty period.
Do we really know short warranties doesnt mean poor reliability? You don't believe if a company can put a 5 year warranty sticker on a product they wouldn't? That makes no sense. If they were confident it could hold up for 5 years and not lose their arse, they wouldn't have to raise the price to compensate for such a warranty. As it stands, its priced too high so no wiggle room already.
Did I read this review wrong? Cheap arse internals, meh results....meh unit with a meh warranty to match. I don't think it will die day 731 either, but neither will any other power supply die the day after their longer warranty too. Obviously a unit with a 5 year warranty, the company has enough confidence in the product in some form to set it like that. Here, little confidence (compared to industry standard/average 3-5 years and zero pricing headroom.
As I said at the first post in price range from 30€ to 80€ (up to 100€ if we will talk about high wattage PSUs) Chieftec usually is the best option.
chieftec was better known to start fires than be a viable psu option. They may have a decent unit or two, but generally they are garbage.
crmaris said:
I would also like to mention that I am not a supporter of the insanely long warranty periods of 7–10 years when it comes to power supplies because there are so many potential points of failure in a PSU. With too many returns, a brand will either close shop after some time or increase prices to survive. Moreover, with many "holes" in these warranties in terms of coverage, brands may also refuse to honor these when it comes to PSUs, and not only.
I am personally very skeptical of warranties past the 3–5 year mark. Think about it: You buy a new car, and in the majority of cases, the warranty period ranges from three to five years. Yet with a power supply, you suddenly have a warranty of 10 years, which looks awry, at least to me.
You're comparing a power supply warranty to a car warranty??!?? Yikes. Not remotely the same things... so many more points of potential failure on a car compared to a psu. And some have 10 year/100k mile warranties too..
If a psu company has the confidence in their product to strap a 10 year warranty on it and not lose their arse, why not?? Thus logic about the warranty doesnt make sense, to me, at all.
crmaris said:
With that having been said, Chieftec does have to find a way to offer a longer warranty because other brands
They can start by making a higher quality product. They can't raise the price as it already isn't good.