Could you share you vision of useful PSU review format, because, at current form, 99% of them fail to deliver useful data that actually matters for PC builders. We are too much into wanking around useless numbers, basically if a PSU fails to meet some basic ATX specs, it should be banned either way, clients do not need to think about specifics, they do not understand either way, like it is 1970ies esoteric analog tech magazine, but the useful question will my PC with CPU X and GPU Y work without issues, without compromises on protections, imho are being too lax lately, that is a different topic. The spikey mixed load current behaviour is not that reviewed with simulated loads, I fail to see how on earth some more badges can help buyer to answer if my PSU enough. Who says that we actually need so sophisticated supplies, considering the on board VRM power delivery has gotten better itself, not needing so many aspects the reviews cover. 90% of office PC using cheap and cheery OEM PSUs work, the overkill gamer logic stigma, it ventures into stupid... well yeah... money, I understand.
I don't necessarily agree with you. Sure, a PSU should be a pass/fail. It should either pass all of the tests or not. But the reviews are typically done very quickly, with one unit and often incorrectly. When I test a PSU after an EVT, DVT, PVT, I test five units on the ATE. At 90V and 264V. At 25°C and 50°C. One unit typically does fail and when that happens, everything stops until a failure analysis is done. There are thermal tests and PC compatibility tests. Units are sent to Intel for validation, Cybenetics, PAL labs, etc. Nothing moves to the next phase until every unit passes. This is why it takes me almost a year to put out a new PSU. I have failed SO MANY PSUs that reviewers have passed and slapped "recommended" tags on, it just kills me.
It should be a very objective process. But sadly, it ends up being quite subjective. There are "hard and fast" rules to PSU testing. Sadly, too often opinions get in the way.
"The caps aren't Japanese" You do realize those Japanese brand caps are made in the same Chinese factory as the ones you "don't like" and know nothing about, right? "There is only 100mm between the SATA connectors" So? "The exhaust temperatures are very high" Yet the efficiency isn't impacted. This only means that the airflow through the PSU is good. Not that the PSU is bad. And then, as I stated earlier, the testing just isn't thorough enough.
And then there's reviewers with 100K worth of equipment that don't know how to use it.
Unfortunately, once you're on the inside for over a decade like I have been, you become very jaded. I learn something new every week. Even Aris is learning as he goes and will eventually get to the point where he won't want to review PSUs anymore.
I know I don't. And Oklahoma Wolf said the same thing.
If you want to "keep it simple stupid", you could do all of the tests and ONLY point out where the PSU failed. At the end of the day, that's what a lot of people do when they jump to the conclusion page of a review. And while this may work for most, I still feel a lot of information is lost not only on the end user... but also the reviewer!