New 1 Kilowatt PSU - Too Much Power? 535
Steve from Hexus writes "While at the GC 2005 gaming convention in Leipzig, Germany, Hexus.net encountered a new 1kW PSU from Enermax, called the 'Galaxy'. At peak output it will use 1.4kW of mains power to provide a total of 66 amps across its various power rails. Who will actually have a need for this PSU, and when this amount of power is being consumed, shouldn't we be thinking about redundant power systems (or perhaps energy efficiency) instead?"
Awesome... (Score:5, Funny)
NetBSD Toaster (Score:5, Interesting)
A kilowatt is a bit light-weight for a toaster, but on the other hand it doesn't need highly filtered DC in several different voltages, so the power supply can look suspiciously like the power cord used by other power supplies...
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Awesome... (Score:3, Informative)
But having a BS-CE, and having done a senior project involving USB back in school, I can't just let the inaccuracy of that statement slide...
<pedantry>
The power capacity or amperage of the power supply will have no effect on an individual port-powered USB device. The USB standard divides devices into two power classes: low-power (less than 0.25A) and high-power (between 0.25A and 0.5A). And IIRC, one powered USB port can only source a maximum of 1A to all devices connected through that
Re:Awesome... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Awesome... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Awesome... (Score:5, Funny)
You build it, one is born every minute to buy it (Score:5, Insightful)
Who said you were the target audience for this product? I am sure if you want to buy one enermax won't say, nah you're goofy for spending money on this everyone knows that a 250 watt compusa generic brand works for just as good. This is, just maby, a stab at a *server* or it will be required for the next high end Nvidia card. I just hope that the goofs at work don't come in boasting about their new 1000 watt(!) power supply staring the next arms race right after the mega hertz debacle has ended.
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:5, Funny)
Why on earth would you use this in a server? In a server environment you are probably going to be much more concerned with redundancy and energy efficiency, the two things notably lacking here.
No, this thing is squarely directed at people uncomfortable with the size of their penis.
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:5, Funny)
Not at all! It's not that I'm uncofmortable with the size of my penis, it's that I need 1.21 kilowatts to power the flux capacitor on my not-penis-related motorcycle with a V8 engine [bosshoss.com].
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:5, Informative)
HDD Power consumption [storagereview.net]
IDE/SATA drives only draw about 7-13W Idle/read&write, 15K SCSI drives a bit over 20W read&write.
Spin up might be a problem, but I'd assume you'd want to use cards that supported staggered sinpup on a setup that large.
So, yes 16 HDDs can pull quite a bit of power, about 300W for top end SCSI solutions. Though you wouldn't be thought of as particularly bright if you entrust a setup like that to a basic quality desktop PSU. And the quality of supplies you'd be using with a high end storage array like that (ie something in the N+1 redundant Zippy line) have been availible at well over 1000W for a while.
I think a 1000W PSU in a standard EAXT setup is massive overkill. I really have a hard time thinking of a workstation / stand alone server setup that would be too much for quality 500-600W PSUs to handle right now.
Anandtech reviewed a 4 CPU dual core Opteron setup from SUN while back, it only drew about 600W.
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:5, Insightful)
Most clusters have a PSU per one or two processors, shouldn't fewer, larger supplies actually be more efficient?
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course, this Enermax PSU won't fit into any of these devices. I can't even imagine how you could build a desktop system that would ever need much more than 1/2 that PSU's possible output. Quad CPU boards are a little difficult to come by [supermicro.com], and they won't run off completely standard PSUs anyway (although the label on the PSU says it's EPS 12V, so it might have the 24 pin power + 8 pin processor power connectors). However, this isn't really the market for whitebox manufacturers, and what meager money you might save would most likely be outweighed by the next-day shipping of replacement parts that name brand vendors can offer you.
Besides, I don't even want to contemplate needing a dedicated 15A breaker just for my system. My little 350W PSU is working just fine for me.
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:2)
It'll be purchased by a bunch of 18-25 year olds, but that's fine - let them drive the price down.
I imagine it should warm up some cold dorm rooms running Seti@Home or WorldCommunityGrid or something (mostly useless) like that...
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:5, Insightful)
More likely, however, is that it's being done for bragging rights. Dodge, for example, put the Viper into production, even though the small margins add very little to their ledger. The reason was that it lifted the brand up as a whole; other models, as horrible as they are, became a little more cool through association.
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:5, Informative)
I guess, since you specified Intel, you might need an additional 100W, but thats still just 2/3s what this thing outputs.
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:3, Informative)
The price on the other hand...
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:3, Insightful)
You still won't need this monster.
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:3, Informative)
Probably the same reason it won't have "overclocking features" - ie: there's not much overlap between the group of people who want $1500 Quad-CPU motherboards (that take $700ea CPUs) and those who want l33t SLI-video "gaming rigs".
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:4, Informative)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:2, Funny)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:2)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:2)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:2, Funny)
I've had prototype Itanic systems on a 15 watt circuit with 5 other (non-Itanic) machines and not tripped the breaker until I accidentally plugged in a coffee maker on the same circuit.
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:5, Funny)
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to have an Antec 550W PSU, powering my WS with a K8WE, and 2 mid range Opterons.. and for a while I thought having to wait 20-30s before my PC would start after pressing the power button is *normal*
Apparently not so, the moment I got a PC Power and Cooling 850W PSU, the system powers up immediately.
At this point I still do not have any explaination for it, but seeing all those capacitors on the K8WE, perhaps it needs to *charge* them all up somehow before starting, and the old PSU is just too short of juice to do that?
Just a crazy explaination with no basis behind it probably, but the fact remains, a good PSU matters! Get a good PSU for your PC today!
*PS: I'm not from PC Cooling, but their PSUs really made me change the way I look at offerings from "Antec" and other such brands, I used to think Antec was great... but I did learn that it really is just a rebadged ChannelWell.
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:3, Informative)
Does it? I totally can not agree. I don't have anything resembling a gamer machine, just a simple asus a7v333 with amd 2800xp, pair of drives, a few cards, and ati 9600 video. That 250watt compusa generic powersupply does NOT cut the mustard. It looks like it works but I've establ
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:3, Informative)
I have, many times. Many just list a wattage, most of mine list Max wattage and peek output. For example this crappy supply that came with my full tower is listed as 300watt but clearly marked peek output total 165watt. To me that says 55% efficent. Utter crap but never the less any time I actually see it clearly marked max output the value is lower than the wattage rating by there and abouts of 70%, in rare cases less, in even more rare cases more.
W
Re:You build it, one is born every minute to buy i (Score:4, Insightful)
Please sir, never build a computer yourself.
The sad truth is that the quality of power supplies IS dependant on how much money you spend. First of all, 250w is simply not enough to power a demanding computer. When the processor alone draws up to 130w (Pentium 4) and each of the two videocards draws 80w (GeForce 7800 GTX), just the CPU and videocards alone are already drawing 290w at peak. Don't forget the motherboard, hard drives, sound card, and all other peripherals and cards.
So, now that we've established that 250w isn't enough, even if it WAS enough, why wouldn't a generic PSU work? Well, because the cheaper you go, the shiftier the manufacturers get with their wattage claims. Yes, that generic power supply can hit 250w. At room temperature. However, with the heat inside a PSU usually closer to 40c to 50c, the cheap PSU can only provide a fraction of their rating. Not to mention that the power from the generic PSU isn't going to be nearly as clean, or nearly as close to the desired voltages on the rails. And cheapo PSUs are unreliable too; they have a way higher failure rate than higher quality PSUs. I blew out 4 cheap PSUs in a 2 year period due to my houses's less than optimal power quality before I finally got a good quality Antec. It has lasted another 2 years without issue.
The general rule of thumb for the quality of a power supply is the weight. The heavier the power supply, generally, the higher quality. Compare a 300w generic power supply to a 300w "premium" power supply, and the better quality one weighs about twice as much. There is a reason for this, better internal cooling and a heck of a lot more internal components.
Redundant power? (Score:5, Funny)
shouldn't we be thinking about redundant power systems
What? Two 1 kilowatt supplies? That'll save lots of power.. great idea!
Re:Redundant power? (Score:2)
Actually, more like maybe fail-over, one doesn't turn on full until the other shows signs of dying.
Lots of servers have redundant power supplies, though they aren't stupid like this.
I don't think redundant power supplies really has a place in anything but servers though. Desktop PCs shouldn't be on unless they are actually being used, it's silly to waste electricity like that. Even for "heating" in the cold months, the cost per unit of
Re:Redundant power? (Score:3, Insightful)
The summary said "shouldn't we be thinking about redundant power systems (or perhaps energy efficiency) instead?" Energy efficiency I can agree with but why mention redundant power? I can't see the connection. Redundant power won't help with increased power demands only with keeping the demand fulfilled when the main systems fail.
Mmmm, tasty power. (Score:4, Funny)
Seriously though, bigger machines have been using far more power for years. Although my 6 CPU Sun box only eats 875W.
First quintic polynomial post (Score:5, Funny)
1000 watts
1400 watts peak output
66 amps
1 quintic polynomial post
2005, 1000, 1400, 66 and 1 are the zeroes of
Oh, noes, this is gonna be a new fad :) (Score:2)
Re:Oh, noes, this is gonna be a new fad :) (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh, noes, this is gonna be a new fad :) (Score:4, Informative)
So REAL nerds recognized that you don't need to manually check it!
That's nothing. (Score:5, Funny)
One point twenty-one jigawatts?!
Re: (Score:2)
Re:That's nothing. (Score:3, Funny)
what the.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:what the.. (Score:2)
Re:what the.. (Score:3, Insightful)
sounds suspiciously like someone is making a square root of two error (perhaps by confusing peak to peak something with RMS of that something)
square root of 2 ~ 1.414
Re:what the.. (Score:4, Funny)
Now that's just irrational.
I'll admit it... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'll admit it... (Score:3, Funny)
Purpose (Score:5, Funny)
Sure, I'll be compensating for my ice-cold burrito by running a microwave oven off the USB.
Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:5, Interesting)
I ask because I work for a motion control company, and for the benefit of those not knowledgable, simultaneous multi-axis motion is not for the faint of heart. We use custom hardware that includes a CPU and a rather capable FPGA to accomplish it. With that and several software trade secrets, we design, engineer, and program our own hardware.
I'm not saying it's impossible to do at home, but I've never considered it a hobbyist kind of thing to do. If you have, I'm impressed (and would indeed like to see pictures). If you've used some "off the shelf" motion control hardware, or else if you cheated on the simultaneous multi-access part then I'm considerably less impressed. Still a cool project, though.
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:4, Interesting)
The hardware - optical encoders with enough hardware to get the encoder values into a CPU-readable I/O register, and simple servo controllers with a hardware "velocity loop". (You give it a velocity value, and it tries it's darndest to keep the motor at that velocity.) Position and acceleration control done completely by software.
I did this for a parametrically-programmed (as opposed to a step-by-step CNC controller) tru-flute machine for this company. I implemented simimar software on a Z80 for another company, which used it to retrofit cam-operated lathes used to make turbo housings for diesel trucks. (Fewer axes, though - piece of cake.)
20 years later - I wouldn't be surprised to find quite a few hobbyists who could do it on a 4gHz Pentium IV...
I seem to recall hearing of some people who did this as a hobbyist project at the time. You see, pen plotters were not cheap...
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:3, Interesting)
It works more than well enough for me. I can hold better than 0.001 inch tolerance. BTW, I run it on a 200MHz Pentium. All the motor control stuff is home-made, based on L298 motor drivers.
The real trick is to do it from DOS. If you use windows then the timing has to be done in a real-time external box. DOS is already real-time.
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:3, Informative)
I will be using Linux EMC [sourceforge.net] to control it. This is a program which uses Linux + either RTAI or RTLinux for realtime. It does 6-axis control, and has pluggable kinematics modules (ie, it can control X-Y-Z milling machines, Stewart platforms (hexapods), radial arm robots (like the PUMA 560), etc).
The G-code interpreter is actually the reference RS274NGC interpreter, originally developed at NIST. There is stil
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:4, Funny)
With a 1kW PSU of course...
Re:Sweeeeeeet.... (Score:3, Informative)
1kW (Score:5, Funny)
~DOCSANE
Definitely unnecessary (Score:5, Insightful)
Its complete bollocks.
A mate and I went to Akihabara to buy him a new PC. He had loads of money to burn on it, and burn he did. Dual core Athlon 64, 8 - yes, Eight, SATA-II 320GB drives, a raid card, 2 x GeForce 7800s (I think thats the model?), a SLI capable motherboard, etc etc...
And the guy came over and tried to sell him this really ugly loud monster PSU (700 watts) for it. We looked at it, and then at the 420 Watt power supply that had all the SATA power we needed, plus the power for the SLI, plus everything else.
It came with some software to see what the power draw is.
He set it all up. How much its drawing? Even when he is hammering the RAID5 volumes as hard as he can, he still only draws about 300watts.
Do we need 1KW PSUs? no. I don't think so. Not unless your machine has something like 30 drives in it, and good luck finding a case that fit that many.
Re:Definitely unnecessary (Score:2)
Re:Definitely unnecessary (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Definitely unnecessary (Score:5, Informative)
Do we need 1KW PSUs? no. I don't think so.
Generally, when I buy an overpowered PS, it's because I need a particular amp capacity on one of the rails. So I need a 550W PS for an Athlon 1.4Ghz box that probably draws 200W. This was because only the 550W model had the proper rating for +5DC.
Re:Definitely unnecessary (Score:2)
The guy isn't having any problems *shrug*. I guess we'll know if it explodes!
Re:You are wrong... This is why (Score:3, Interesting)
Scsi cards have had this for at least 5 years. You can set them to delay spin up for 2*scsi id , so the drive with id 1 spins up at 2s, the drive with id 2 spins up after 4 s, etc. It's useful when a scsi chain can
"Who will actually have a need for this ..." (Score:2, Offtopic)
"Good for servers, but no one needs this much CPU power in the home."
IT power usage (Score:3, Interesting)
Still I'm pretty horified to think about all those kilowatts being used for Clippy or other features on our desktops that nobody ever asked for but that demand faster chips, mor storage, higher clockspeeds and fast increasing power consumption, etc.
Re:IT power usage (Score:2)
Where I work, the monthly power bill for the datacenter (power to machines, disk arrays, battery systems, and cooling for the room) is around $30,000. And I know I've seen bigger datacenters - we're just yet another technology-reliant company among thousands upon thousands of others.
You better hope not (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, if that's the case we're in deep shit.
The reason is that constant-power loads like PSUs and "smart" motors have a negative-resistance load curve. Negative resistance load curves have another name in electrical engineering:
Unstable.
If the electric utility gets even close to a brownout, the PSUs suck even more current. Which in turn drops the voltage to them, which in turn ....
Net result: breakers tripping all over the place. Which in turn causes a ripple blackout all over the Grid, since the Grid doesn't respond remotely as fast as those PSUs do.
Sleep tight. Have happy dreams.
Re:IT power usage (Score:4, Interesting)
To use 1 KW for playing games sounds pretty awful. But to use maybe even more power at the datacenter where your ISP is located to take care of your teleworking sounds like a good deal (compared to the gas your car needs for commuting).
One gallon of Gas contains roughly 34kWh of energy, so a 10 mile commute at 30mpg cones to about 22kWh round trip (assuming that that 34kWh is the available energy capacity). Next to that, 1kW for 8 hours is nothing.
Oh, ENOUGH already. 1kW is a joke. (Score:3, Interesting)
Your average 100hp car, motorbike, whatever, puts out about 75,000W - 75kW. This is at an efficiency of maybe 25% if you are lucky. So there's 300kW of power right there - so you can blow through a lot of juice on that little car of yours.
Now, my poison of choice is turbocharged 4 bangers that make about 300hp, give or take how it's feeling on any one day. 300hp at a 25% efficiency figure, which is HIGH - is about 900kW, or almost a MEGAWATT of energy. I guess
Re:IT power usage (Score:3, Informative)
If you include all electronics (including TVs and stereos, etc.) it reaches about 10%.
Not that unreasonable for an SLI Machine (Score:2, Informative)
Niche product (Score:2)
Great! (Score:2, Funny)
Rediculous! (Score:2)
This is insane and something is fishy if x86 hardware is this demanding.
Are the components filled with gobs of transistors and poor quality capacitators which use more power?
To me anything over 300 watts should not exist for a pc. After all the new PS3 which is about as powerfull as a pc if not more uses what? 90 watts?
What about Octal dual-core opteron servers? (Score:5, Interesting)
quad processor, with support module to add another 4, with dual core support... I am planning on getting this for a 3d rendering workstation at work:
http://www.tyan.com/products/html/thunderk8qw.htm
Now imagine this fully populated, with a few TB array at 10W per drives, it goes up fast to 1Kw...
I'm planning on getting one of those for a specific 3D application where I need several cpus inside the main machine (render nodes wouldn't be as efficient) so I was actually wondering if there were a lot of 800W+ psus out there... interresting.
(please don't argue about the fact that 10 pcs would cost less blablalba, this is beyond the scope of this message, question was is there a use, yes there is
Redundancy or Energy Efficiency (Score:2)
No, we should concentrate on what matters: Actively-cooled Nomex loungewear with IV hydration systems to keep users from dying of heat exhaustion. (The noise-canceling headphones are already available.)
In case you wondered, it's too late: I already filed a patent application for sensing devices coupled into ACPI to t
Take advantage of cheap energy (Score:2, Insightful)
Appropriate Name (Score:2)
overkill is good (Score:4, Interesting)
I prefer to overengineer anything to do with power supplies, since they tend to run hot when near their limit, and can only run for so long at that level (which may be well within their specs) before they smoke.
That, and having a little extra reserve is nice in case you want to hook up an extra pair of HDs, try out that new video card with the box fan attached to it, or add a few christmas trees worth of lights to the case. That's also likely a PS that will be the one original thing still IN that case six years from now.
Naw... (Score:5, Funny)
Engraved on the side of the power supply: 975W
Date on the manufacturing plate: 1983
'bout time PCs caught up.
Re:Naw... (Score:3)
Two words (Score:3, Funny)
Uses for 1kw? (Score:3, Insightful)
It will sell (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course I need this (Score:3, Funny)
Orion Multisystems could use this power supply (Score:3, Interesting)
Rating != Consumption, justification for PS (Score:3, Informative)
If you run a 200W load on a 250W power supply then you will have a great deal of ripple. If you run a 200W load on a 1kW power supply then you will have much less ripple. ripple == fluctuating voltage == unstable pc
Re:Rating != Consumption, justification for PS (Score:4, Informative)
Computer power supplies use a switching circuit to generate the output voltages. Not the simply, rectifier and filter system you described. They do use a recifier and filter, but this is only at the initial stage and ripple at that point doesn't significantly affect the output.
In a rectifier and filter supply, using a full wave rectifier does not double efficiency. It does allow you to get by with less filtering and a reduced peak input current.
Creating a full wave bridge rectifier doesn't involve adding 1 component to a half wave rectifier. In fact, you need 3 more components. A half wave rectifier is just a single diode. A full wave rectifier consists of 4 diodes.
Switching supplies do have ripple, and it is effected by the load on the supply. Some of the other factors affecting the amount of ripple are switching frequency, inductance of the switched coil, capacitance and resistance of the output capacitor, and input voltage.
Capacitors placed near ICs on the motherboard are for filtering out high frequency noise than can be induced on the circuit board traces. These capacitors are not normally the right values for filtering out 60 or 120 hz noise from a rectifier. If it weren't for induced noise on the traces, you could simply place one capacitor at (or in, as there already is) the power supply instead of one at each IC.
Your computer should run perfectly stable on any supply up to its rated output power and current. If a supply outputs so much noise that your computer is unstable before you reach the rated output, then it is almost certainly faulty or rated in such a way as to scam consumers.
With the same load, a higher rated supply might run cooler or with a cleaner output; but it depends on many different factors. You need to know things like output noise and efficiency. Output power alone is not enough information.
1 kilowatt? Bah... (Score:4, Funny)
Two Words... (Score:3, Insightful)
If you're using a Peltier for cooling the CPU down to ambient or below for overclocking, you're going to need either this sort of power supply or some serious redundant units. The 120W Peltiers eat an unbelieveable fourteen amperes at 15 VDC. That's 210W by itself. Any other craziness like that and that wattage gets burned up quickly.
Now, does one NEED something like this? No.
But I am glad that there's a real high-end for switching supplies for personal computers these days. 500's okay for most setups, but I can see a 1kW supply being useful for others (i.e. all in a nice single case instead strung all over creation...).
Re:Time to act like responsible people.... (Score:2)
Re:"Mains power" ? (Score:3, Informative)
Example usage "You can run this radio from a battery, or you can plug it into the mains".
Re:It can supply a kW, but ... (Score:4, Informative)