Silverstone SFX Series ST45SF-G 450 W Review 13

Silverstone SFX Series ST45SF-G 450 W Review

Ripple Measurements »

Advanced Transient Response Tests

In these tests, we monitor the response of the PSU in two different scenarios. First, a transient load (10 A at +12V, 5 A at 5V, 5 A at 3.3V, and 0.5 A at 5VSB) is applied to the PSU for 200 ms while the latter is working at a 20% load state. In the second scenario, the PSU is hit by the same transient load while working at 50% load. In both tests, we measure the voltage drops that the transient load causes using our oscilloscope. The voltages should remain within the regulation limits defined by the ATX specification. We must stress here that the above tests are crucial since they simulate transient loads that a PSU is very likely to handle (e.g., booting a RAID array, an instant 100% load of CPU/VGAs, etc.) We call these tests "Advanced Transient Response Tests", and they are designed to be very tough to master, especially for PSUs with capacities lower than 500 W.

Advanced Transient Response 20%
VoltageBeforeAfterChangePass/Fail
12 V12.071V11.855V1.79%Pass
5 V5.020V4.884V2.71%Pass
3.3 V3.341V3.228V3.38%Pass
5VSB5.026V4.967V1.17%Pass


Advanced Transient Response 50%
VoltageBeforeAfterChangePass/Fail
12 V12.012V11.810V1.68%Pass
5 V4.991V4.863V2.56%Pass
3.3 V3.309V3.197V3.38%Pass
5VSB4.978V4.923V1.10%Pass


Although its small capacity is a disadvantage in these tests, the small PSU managed to pass them all successfully since it registered small deviations on all rails. Something noteworthy is that the 3.3V rail registered exactly the same deviation on both tests. Talk about coincidence here!


You will find the oscilloscope screenshots that we took during Advanced Transient Response Testing below:

Transient Response at 20% Load



Transient Response at 50% Load



Turn-On Transient Tests

We measure the response of the PSU in simpler scenarios of transient loads - during the power-on phase of the PSU - in the next set of tests. In the first test, we turn the PSU off, dial the maximum current that the 5VSB can output, and then switch on the PSU. In the second test, we dial the maximum load that +12V can handle and we start the PSU, all while the PSU is in standby mode. In the last test, while the PSU is completely switched off (we cut off power or switch off the PSU's on/off switch), we dial the maximum load that the +12V rail can handle before switching the PSU on from the loader and restoring power. The ATX specification states that recorded spikes on all rails should not exceed 10% of their nominal values (e.g., +10% for 12V is 13.2V and for 5V is 5.5V).


We noticed voltage overshoots on all three tests. However, 5VSB was below the nominal voltage and the +12V rail reached, at worst - here in standby to full 12V - 12.38V, which is a reading much lower than the upper limit.
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