No it doesn't.
This has turned into a silly nit-picky argument. This will be my last post on this subject.
As stated
multiple times already, that 22W is based on the PSU being under a
continuous load of
many 100s of watts.
Computers don't work that way! Other electronics certainly do. Monitors and TVs, for example, have fairly constant demands. But NOT computers!
The load a computer imposes on its PSU is not only constantly varying, but it is sitting closer to its idle demand a greater percentage of the time. Don't believe me? Then get a "good" UPS with AVR that has a status display, or get a
kill-a-watt meter and monitor your own usage. I guarantee, unless you are "folding" 24/7/365 looking for a cure for cancer, your power demand the vast majority of the time is much less than you think!
Not only that, even with COVID-19 and being confined to homes, users are NOT sitting in front of their computers 24 hours per day. Not 12 hours, not 8, not even 6 hours. And for sure, they are
NOT maxing out the power consumption of their CPUs
AND GPUs (
AND drives
AND RAM
AND motherboards too)
continuously and
simultaneously during their computing sessions either.
Even the most extreme, power demanding games rarely demand maximum power from the components and when they do, it is even more rare they would demand that power from both the CPU and GPU
at the same time. But when those demands do occur, they tend to be for short bursts, not continuously.
What that means is that 22W is an extreme and exceptional number that comes into play a few scant
minutes per day total! Not hours! The realistic value for the difference between Gold and Titanium is more likely less than what a child's small nightlight consumes (3 - 7W) - but for much fewer hours each day (not all night long).
So it does not matter if power where you live cost $.14 per kWh or $.50 per kWh, we are still talking pennies per month - not dollars per day.
Now I don't care how you spend your money. And for sure, if I could get, for example, a 650W Seasonic or EVGA Platinum or Titanium for the same price of an equivalent quality 650W Seasonic or EVGA Gold, I would jump on that in a heartbeat. But PLEASE, stop trying to justify spending more on a Platinum or Titanium by rationalizing that the better efficiency ratings will save you more in the long run. With very few anecdotal exceptions, that just isn't reality.