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Thread: eXtreme Power Supply Calculator v2.5 (Online Freeware [Basic Version])

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Orlando FL
    Age
    70
    Posts
    1,316

    eXtreme Power Supply Calculator v2.5 (Online Freeware [Basic Version])

    The eXtreme Power Supply Calculator contains 600+ CPU including latest processors from Intel and AMD such as Conroe, Intel Core 2 Duo, Intel Core 2 Extreme, Intel Core Solo, Intel Core Duo, Intel Xeon, Intel Pentium, AMD Athlon 64, AMD Athlon 64 FX, AMD Athlon 64 X2, AMD Opteron, AMD Sempron 64, 939, AM2, F and LGA775 sockets and latest graphics cards from NVIDIA and ATI such as GeForce 7900 GS, 7900 GTX, 7950 GT, 7950 GX2, Radeon X1900 XTX, X1950 XTX, graphics cards from EVGA and Gigabyte and more. Power supply calculator has the ability to select hard drive type (IDE, SCSI, SATA), NVIDIA SLI or ATI Crossfire technology, cooling fan, PCI card, external device, USB and Firewire, water cooling kit and components, etc. This version of eXtreme Power Supply Calculator determines the overall computer power supply wattage for your desktop computer, server, computer racks or any pc computer system that uses ATX power supply.

    Extreme.Outervision

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    192.168.10.100
    Age
    39
    Posts
    4,486
    That's really cool!!

    System Type:
    Single Processor
    Motherboard:
    Regular - Desktop
    CPU:
    AMD Athlon 64 3700+ 2200 MHz San Diego 1.35v
    CPU Utilization (TDP):
    85% TDP
    RAM:
    1 Stick DDR SDRAM
    Video Card:
    ATI Radeon X1900 GT
    Video Type:
    Single Card
    SATA HDD:
    1 HDD
    DVD-RW/DVD+RW Drive:
    2 Drives
    56K PCI Modem:
    Yes
    Additional PCI Card (avg):
    1 Card
    USB:
    2 Devices
    Fans
    LED:
    2 Fans 80mm; 2 Fans 120mm;
    Keyboard and mouse:
    Yes
    System Load:
    100 %

    Recommended Wattage:
    325 Watts
    "Best to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt."

    "Honesty is the First Chapter in the Book of Wisdom" - Thomas Jefferson

    Desktop:
    AMD Phenom II x6 1100T @ 3.3Ghz
    MSi 890FXA-GD70
    16GB G.Skill DDR3-1600
    Asus HD6950 2GB GDDR5 PCI-Ex16
    4x 1.5TB WD SATA w/64MB cache in RAID10
    2x Asus 22x DVD/CD +/-RW DL SATA
    Rosewill Xtreme Series 950W PSU
    2x 23" 5ms Asus Widescreen LCD
    Laptop:
    15" Aluminum MacBook Pro
    Intel Core 2 Duo 2.53Ghz
    4GB DDR3 @ 1067MHz
    320GB SATA 7200RPM HDD

    **View My Forum**

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    255.255.255.666
    Posts
    2,056
    Another cool link, gj F1!
    I particularly like the part about the importance of 12v and 5v and the rails.
    a PSU with a 80AMP 12v output but on a 4 rail system is a lot less desirable than the one with 70/60AMP output based on a single or even 2 rail system.
    People should also know the difference of maximum output Wattage they normally seen on the PSY means nothing if the average output is laughably low. Also review the certifications the PSU obtained on what tests it passed!
    Also a label indicating 'AMD/Intel Recommend' is not the same thing as 'AMD/Intel Approved'.
    I don't care for spending a bundle on name brand components just case but in the case of PSU, going cheap is almost always a sure way a big headaches down the road...PSU, Mobo and RAM are the 3 most important components andt should try to purchase the best you can afford!

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