Igor in Germany his is the only reliable source so far for making electrical measurements over PC hardware.
Yeah right. LOL
Nvidia recommend a 850 watt power supply, do you believe people plucked that figure out their asses?.
Note okidna's screen shot and pay particular attention to the fine print. #2 specifically where it says (my
bold underline added),
2 - Requirement is made based on PC configured with an Intel Core i9-10900K processor. A lower power rating may work depending on system configuration.
The point is, no manufacturer (or PSU calculator) wants to recommend an underpowered PSU. So they don't - and rightfully so.
Too many hyoerconservatives here for sure..lol.
I agree. But then I think there are too many of all the extremes. That is, there are some who are convinced bigger is always better so they buy 1200W Titanium when a 600W Gold is more than enough. Then there are some who run the numbers, come up 350W maximum so they insist on getting a 350W (I can only hope at least Bronze) - leaving no room for any upgrades a couple years down the road. Then there are some who, no matter what, say getting a quality 650W is the way to go.
If those were the only 3 options, I supposed I would be in the 650W camp as that typically is safe without going too far overboard. Even with a power hungry system, it is very rare for both the CPU and GPU to max out demands at the same point in time.
But the right way is to really do your homework, research all the individual components (motherboard, RAM, CPU, GPU, fans, drives and everything else that will get power from the PSU), plan ahead for any possible upgrades in a year or two, add a little buffer for aging and perhaps quieter operation, then calculate your needs from there. I used to do that, then added 50 to 100W for good measure and [hopefully] quieter operation (accepting the fact that 50 and 100W are arbitrary).
But now I'm too old and got lazy so I use the Outervision PSU Calculator because it is the most flexible and conservative. Though of course, it too pads the results - just not as much as less flexible and less extensive calculators.
you dont need to overspend on additional wattage because of some convoluted idea in people's heads about running at 50% or something.
I agree again. I never understood that either. I can only assume that 50% figure came from ancient history - long before the 80 PLUS certification program came about, when basic PSUs were the norm and that 50% was where they provided peak efficiency. But even then, I think 70% better represented the typical bell curve peak there. Either way, I agree, doubling is going overboard unless you know for a fact you will be adding a second graphics card and a more powerful CPU next year.