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Best PSU manufacturer

What does "best" mean? Highest performing (v-reg, r/n, efficiency)? Most reliable/resilient? Least number of platforms unworthy of a recommendation?

And you do realize that most manufacturers make what the vendors ask them for, right?

The one I like best, which is also currently represented in the consumer/prosumer market, is Flextronics. Not saying why, though :p

I like knowing that when I buy a particular brand, I can depend on it to work perfectly, for a long, long time without destroying my components. A PSU failure can mean a devastating loss of components.

I'm speaking as a prior Antec PSU owner who lost almost everything inside of my case once.
I couldn't afford to replace everything at the time, and had to do without a PC for a few months. It was a hard lesson, and one that I never forgot.
 
My top 5 OEMs are: Delta, Flextronics, Seasonic, SuperFlower and some higher end Enermax units. Just my 2c.
 
The one I like best, which is also currently represented in the consumer/prosumer market, is Flextronics. Not saying why, though :p

Corsair fanboy? :D
 
That's really not a discussion you want to start with me right now. As a resident of NH I can tell you a couple things:
A: NH produces most of its power internally. Right now Hydro Quebec is trying to run a HVDC swath through NH. I can't tell you how many people in my state that has angered because all it would do would provide Massachusetts power where NH has no need for more power and all it would do it put power lines through our forests (huge resistance to burring the lines as well.)
B: You know what's cheaper? Using power closer to where it's produced! Merrimack station is a 9 minute drive from my house (clean coal, yes, as clean as coal can get as Merrimack station is outfitted with a multi-million dollar scrubber.) Gavin's Falls hydro plant is 5 minutes away from where I live. On top of all of that, only 19% of NH's power is created by alternative means.
C: Don't forget about the Nuclear plant in Seabrook, and the hybrid oil/ng plant, cocoa shell, and bio fuel plants in Portsmouth.

Lets do a little math shall we?

Using this for energy content of fuels: http://www.hrt.msu.edu/energy/pdf/heating value of common fuels.pdf
Currently the cheapest cost of oil in NH is 2.899 USD a gallon (we'll assume Oil fuel #2 having the smallest energy content to give you the benefit of the doubt.)

Lets say that you have a house where in the middle of winter you have a 300,000 BTU/hr furnace at 91% that runs off oil and electric that runs off... well, electric.
Our constant numbers are:
Oil energy content: 138,500 BTU/gal
Electicity energy content: 3412 BTU/kwh

So instantly we can use some numbers to determine how much electricity is required to do the same job as oil.
138,500 BTU/gal / 3412 BTU/kwh = 40.59 kwh/gal which means for the same job that one gallon of oil does, you need 40 KWH to do the same job not to add that electric costs increase in the winter as well.
So here in NH (which wouldn't be impacted by Hydro Quebec for the reasons I explained above.):
Delivery charge: 0.05977 USD/kwh
Fixed energy cost (variable costs more): 0.15544 USD/kwh
Total cost per kwh: 0.21521 kwh
Conversion ratio: 40.59:1 kwh/gal
Cost per replacement gallon of oil fuel: 0.21521 kwh/USD * 40.59 kwh/gal = 8.7353739 USD gal equiv.

So that's the electric cost. So lets check the cost of oil in NH, shall we?
2.899 USD/gal versus ~8.735USD/gal equiv.

So you're right. It isn't worth while down here. Now up there in Quebec, you electricity does cost a whole lot less (when you use less than 10,000 kwh in one month, or if you are standard domestic not hybrid domestic (DT).

The kicker for you is that oil and electricity costs are almost the same (as of data from October, oil prices have dropped sharply since then.)

So while electricity might make sense for you since Quebec does have a lot of hydro but most places in the world don't have that luxury. It doesn't make sense anywhere else in the world with a similar climate because that's not the case.

Also don't say HydroQuebec gives NH power, because the amount given is incredibly small. In addition to that opposition to Northern Pass in the first place is running rampant in the state. We don't need it, therefore we don't want to see it.

Now also keep in mind that US fuel costs are lower than Canada's, so not only is electricity sometimes more expensive, but fuel is also generally cheaper.

...but remember this, if Canada's fuel prices were the same as the US, oil would be cheaper than electric heating. It's not like electric is a lot cheaper than oil in Quebec, it's about the same.

he shouldnt say canada gives us alot of power because seabrook is a stones throw away from everyone. IIRC most of the NH grid is run off of a few turbines and that power plant.
 
Corsair fanboy? :D

Not by a long shot. Flextronics makes server, medical and embedded industrial power supplies first and foremost. They only venture into regular PC market ever so rarely. Corsair must've been pretty persuasive to get them to produce a high-end power supply. Perhaps it was a testing ground for digital control...

Delta did something similar with Antec and their CP-xxx line, possibly trying out a new form factor that could be interesting for 4U rackmount servers. And the HCP-xxxx line was an R&D excursion, mostly to squash any potentially lingering issues before applying the new design in server/enterprise space...
 
Not by a long shot. Flextronics makes server, medical and embedded industrial power supplies first and foremost. They only venture into regular PC market ever so rarely. Corsair must've been pretty persuasive to get them to produce a high-end power supply. Perhaps it was a testing ground for digital control...

Delta did something similar with Antec and their CP-xxx line, possibly trying out a new form factor that could be interesting for 4U rackmount servers. And the HCP-xxxx line was an R&D excursion, mostly to squash any potentially lingering issues before applying the new design in server/enterprise space...

I learn something new everyday!
 
· Built in industrial grade protection circuit of OCP, OVP, UVP, OPP and SCP.

(OCP = Over Current Protection, OVP = Over Voltage Protection, UVP = Under Voltage Protection, OPP = Over Power Protection, SCP = Short Circuit)

Had one of those Antec PSU's,that was "recommended because of the protection circuits" it failed and took out a very expensive FX VIVO card I use for editing,
They didn't want any part of trying to "resolve the damage", so then was on to the "better" choice of the FSP 700, then after getting the 5870 with the 2600k @5 Ghz was no brainer when the sale for the SS X750 that tested to around 900 watts, currently using it for many years. Turn's out, that Tt ended up having LOT of failures, if they cant hold ripple, V regulation well, then move on to better Manufacture. It's up to the "brand" to implement the best of a platform it's based on.
It reminds me of people "Foxtron M/B now way: LOL .....................:toast:
 
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Corsair (Using VS 450)
Seasonic
Cooler Master
 
Not by a long shot. Flextronics makes server, medical and embedded industrial power supplies first and foremost. They only venture into regular PC market ever so rarely. Corsair must've been pretty persuasive to get them to produce a high-end power supply. Perhaps it was a testing ground for digital control...

Delta did something similar with Antec and their CP-xxx line, possibly trying out a new form factor that could be interesting for 4U rackmount servers. And the HCP-xxxx line was an R&D excursion, mostly to squash any potentially lingering issues before applying the new design in server/enterprise space...
Just teasing you bra. :)
I know what Flextronics core business is.
 
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