Ripple Measurements
You will see the ripple levels that we measured on the main rails of the TP-750C in the following table. The limits are, according to the ATX specification, 120 mV (+12V) and 50 mV (5V, 3.3V, and 5VSB).
Ripple Measurements - Antec TP-750C |
---|
Test | 12 V | 5 V | 3.3 V | 5VSB | Pass/Fail |
---|
20% Load | 13.1 mV | 6.9 mV | 10.3 mV | 8.2 mV | Pass |
---|
40% Load | 20.1 mV | 7.8 mV | 12.1 mV | 11.4 mV | Pass |
---|
50% Load | 24.8 mV | 8.8 mV | 13.7 mV | 13.2 mV | Pass |
---|
60% Load | 30.1 mV | 16.9 mV | 13.9 mV | 15.0 mV | Pass |
---|
80% Load | 41.3 mV | 25.0 mV | 17.6 mV | 18.3 mV | Pass |
---|
100% Load | 56.1 mV | 29.1 mV | 22.6 mV | 23.3 mV | Pass |
---|
110% Load | 76.3 mV | 32.2 mV | 25.6 mV | 26.6 mV | Pass |
---|
Crossload 1 | 12.9 mV | 8.3 mV | 12.7 mV | 12.8 mV | Pass |
---|
Crossload 2 | 57.5 mV | 26.9 mV | 21.4 mV | 22.4 mV | Pass |
---|
Seasonic PSUs usually register ultra-low ripple on all rails, but that was unfortunately not the case here. The ripple measurements we got in our normal test sessions, overload test exuded, can't be called high, but they can't compare with the values of other Seasonic products we have reviewed in the past. Even the G-550, a unit based on the same platform, achieved a much better ripple suppression, but its capacity is also significantly lower than that of the TP-750C. Anyway, ripple suppression is decent and even very good at up to 80% load. However, it isn't up to par for a Seasonic product because their implementations have spoiled us by being virtually ripple-proof.
Ripple at Full Load
You can see the AC ripple and noise the main rails registered (+12V, 5V, 3.3V, and 5VSB) in the following oscilloscope screenshots. The bigger the fluctuations on the oscilloscope's screen, the bigger the ripple/noise. We set 0.01 V/Div (each vertical division/box equals 0.01 V) as standard as the standard for all measurements.
Ripple at 110% Load
Ripple at Crossload 1
Ripple at Crossload 2