AQIRYS Pulsar LS White 750 W Review 6

AQIRYS Pulsar LS White 750 W Review

Transient Response, Inrush & Leakage Current »

Hold-Up Time

Hold-up time represents the duration for which a PSU can maintain stable output as defined by the ATX specification without input power. This is very important when the quality of your electricity varies, and there are short drops in the supply (dips or brownouts).

In the oscilloscope screenshots below, the blue line is the AC input mains signal, the green line the "Power Good" signal, and the yellow line the +12V rail. The measured timing variable is listed as ΔX.

Hold-Up Time





AC Loss to PWR_OK Hold-Up Time





PWR_OK Inactive to DC Loss Delay





Hold-up time is below 17 ms, and the hold-up time of the power ok signal is also low. The latter is accurate, though.

Timings for Alternative Sleep Mode (ASM)

Traditionally, sleep mode (S3) shuts the system off for a long time, minutes or hours, to reduce power consumption. However, this approach adds a few seconds of delay when resuming from standby. Microsoft recently introduced Modern Sleep, which brings the instant-on capability to PCs—just like your phone instantly turns on without any noticeable delay. Modern Sleep builds on the Alternative Sleep Mode (ASM) capability, which Intel has defined. To support ASM, a power supply must wake up from sleep quickly to ensure system stability—think of it as the PSU's boot time.

For the reviewed PSU, we measured T1 and T3 at 20% and 100% load.

T1 (Power-on time) & T3 (PWR_OK delay)
LoadT1T3
20%68 ms286 ms
100%68 ms300 ms


Power-on time is low enough not to create compatibility issues. The PWR_OK delay is way above 150 ms, so this PSU does not support Alternative Sleep Mode.
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Jan 27th, 2025 00:07 EST change timezone

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