Reminder not to open your own power supply unless you are a trained technician who understands the dangers. We're really excited about this content. Patrick Stone has been working for weeks to learn more about PSU testing & reviews, and in this one, he teaches about how power supplies work by using the Dell G5 PSU as an example. It's surprisingly good! This sort of gets back more to our roots of doing some educational content. I learned a lot by watching back the section that Stone hosted, and we hope you all find it interesting also. We still have a lot to learn with PSUs, but give us some time and we'll keep advancing. We are new to PSU reviews and are still in the stages of figuring out presentation, style, format, etc., but we've had fun working on this one and look forward to doing more. Thanks for all the interest in PSU content! You can see the full saga of the Dell G5 5000 - Part one on component choice & support: kzbin.info/www/bejne/anWwmGmeitqXfqc Part two on benchmarks & bloatware: kzbin.info/www/bejne/a3-akoyqoN9-gMU We even reviewed the included GPU in our standardized GPU test bench: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fnfEe42nZpinqJo Back-order a GN Anti-Static Modmat: store.gamersnexus.net/products/modmat Buy GN's Red & Black Mouse Pad: store.gamersnexus.net/products/gn-charge-redblack-mousepad Blue & Black Mouse Pad: store.gamersnexus.net/products/gn-component-blueblack-mousepad Wireframe Desk-Sized Mouse Mat: store.gamersnexus.net/products/gn-wireframe-mouse-mat
@NZOCD3 жыл бұрын
It would be interesting to see a comparison between consumer and server PSUs, if possible.
@Hogdriva3 жыл бұрын
That PSU looks like the ones in their business conputers, which are usually made by Delta, who are top quality. Interesting that dell chose that PSU.
@notelliot703 жыл бұрын
Excellent to see because the HP Pavillion I've got is totally identical to the Dell you broke down. 😎
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
@@Hogdriva This is made by LiteOn. We said that in the video.
@thomassteinbruchel92533 жыл бұрын
I loved the rundown of the psu circuit and what are their respective jobs, very informative! Good stuff you keep releasing!
@cgfgsks2013 жыл бұрын
To prevent any potential confusion for newcomers to the electronics design field please call it a square wave. Rectangular is technically correct, but there is no electronics engineering textbook that calls it that. It is always a square wave with some amplitude at a specific frequency.
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Sent the comment over to Patrick for his consideration. Thanks for the input.
@PeterMikeSolomon3 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus also please make sure you explicitly mention in the video not to disassemble a PSU if you don't know what you're doing since the built up charges in the capacitors can potentially kill you. As great as this content is, I really wouldn't want some young kid getting hurt tinkering with them.
@TrueThanny3 жыл бұрын
It's called square not because it's a polygon with four sides, but because the intersection between parts of the waveform are square (i.e. at 90 degrees to one another), in the same way you'd call a room "square" when the walls and ceiling meet at 90 degrees as they are supposed to. You don't need to cede ground on the use of "rectangular" because that's just wrong. There's no such term to describe an intersection of 90 degrees.
@bk-sl8ee3 жыл бұрын
@@PeterMikeSolomon can you tell me how to discharge those capacitors? (I change fans on PSU for DIY)
@TatsuZZmage3 жыл бұрын
@@bk-sl8ee Either a Small resistor to drain it as heat touched to both contacts, or a screwdriver if ya don't mind potental damage.
@Zosu223 жыл бұрын
You guys are going to take those intel transitions to the grave, aren’t you.
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
I'll make the Intel transitions a meme if it's the last thing I do.
@cyberceel3 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus Thanks, Steve.
@MrDJAK7773 жыл бұрын
It's what the people want.
@archimedies93693 жыл бұрын
intel is trans? based.
@johncapodilupo68763 жыл бұрын
@@archimedies9369 quite the opposite if you actually knew what based meant.
@MancDerby3 жыл бұрын
Back to you Steve! . That is NEVER going to get old
@SpeakerFan3 жыл бұрын
These types of supplies are also used in Dell's poweredge server line, hence the weird form factor. It makes them swappable. And servers is something you cant cheap out on as a brand.
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
That's great to learn about the Poweredge line. Thanks for letting us know!
@Xfade813 жыл бұрын
@@gg-gn3re There are used in some of them. Not all of them.
@webserververse57493 жыл бұрын
Can verify the PCB design is very similar to that of a Flex form factor PSU. Appears to be potentially a custom housing though. Just took apart a Dell PowerEdge 495 Watt 80+ Platinum PSU Model: F495E-S0. The one in the video is very similar with some component differences. Clearly based on the same platform though.
@chubbysumo22303 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus looks like a PE server PSU with wires soldered on instead of a hot swap pin set. I have a PE R710 PSU up in my bin of parts, and can take a look at it, it is also made by liteon im sure. I can send one to you if you want, but they have some other juju on them that allows them to both hotswap, and also can communicate with the server BCM, for full offline control and monitoring.
@staryoke3 жыл бұрын
Marjie S - Thats just not true. Expecially on this particular "retail consumer" product line (PSUs from Dell). The Poweredge Servers have different PSUs made from Delta. Your comment is like looking at well-built car tires and saying just cause theyre round and made of rubber, they can be used on Semi trucks. Not even close. Theyre only swap-able within their own product category lines - Vostros, Optiplex, Latitudes, etc. The only reason they have a "weird form factor" is for Proprietary sales. Form-factors and swap-ability are mutually exclusive by choice from Dell. The server lines are different products and have their own requirements for components (lights-out, roll-overs, etc) - especially with Xeon, Epyc, and Nvidia AI units in those boxes.
@middleclassthrash3 жыл бұрын
This is the first time I've not glossed over while having electronic circuitry explained to me. Looking forward to more.
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Awesome to hear!
@afrewer943 жыл бұрын
Check out bigclive for more.
@ralekriver3 жыл бұрын
Never seen stone before. Give him some space on the channel to explain things like this, he's untapped potential for the media side of things, if I'm not mistaken about his absence in the videos.
@jamieh40863 жыл бұрын
Really liked this. Especially explaining each part. I have a corsair 1500w psu platinum certification and in the icue options it let's me choose between single and multirail. Never seemed to make a difference (I'm not using near the capability of the psu even with the 3090 or my crazy water cooling). Now I have an idea on what to research more. Maybe a video on why I would select one over the other? When I should? What are the consequences? Etc. Great job as always guys
@cameronwebster68663 жыл бұрын
@@jamieh4086 each rail on your psu will have a rating of X watts. Unless you need more than X watts on one connector, stick with multi-rail, as this is safer if somthing fails short-circuit.
@RngmonsterX3 жыл бұрын
This "Back to you, Steve." kills me every single time. Thank you so much Intel for the Memes!
@yota10923 жыл бұрын
AT 18:15 you could add the graph of 80gold or Platinum certification on the graph to be able to compare better
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Excellent idea!
@yota10923 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus thank you. you are doing an excellent job for the reviews and the industry cheers from France
@rdoursenaud3 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus Yep, just colored background zones would do the trick nicely!
@gamershadow13 жыл бұрын
I’ve been so excited for you guys to start showing power supply testing. Keep up the great work!
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! We're really excited about it too. It's a new review category for us. Patrick (Stone) has been working hard at this testing for PSUs and we're finally in a stage to start sharing. I'm personally excited about it because PSUs are a weak area in my knowledge, and I can learn from the work he's doing. We'll be reading comments closely to keep improving as we figure out how to present the data and how to analyze our findings.
@yotoprules93613 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus I'm definitely interested in those Gigabyte power supplies. I'm also interested in what a low quality PSU can do to a system over time
@rct9993 жыл бұрын
@@Noah-lj2sg Very true, and it also keeps the market sharp and competitive. I am saying this while listening to music via a dac which has been measured by a youtuber.
@sipansibabdreddknot51793 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus looks like future intel motherboards like likely become like laptops mobo
@janjohansson25673 жыл бұрын
"Here we have some screws. Here are some wires. Here we have the active power factor correction and the is the rectangular waveform and the lower voltage smoothing MOSFETs" That escalated fast.jpg
@caio59873 жыл бұрын
😂 I thought the same It went from English to Chinese pretty fast
@guiorgy3 жыл бұрын
@@caio5987 Electronese*
@SciFiFactory3 жыл бұрын
This is exactly how many university lectures start. "So, 1+1 is 2 .... (suddenly some partial differential equations) .... and the rest is trivial, so just do it at home if you want to know what's up with that."
@chuuni69243 жыл бұрын
Just some minor corrections: The chokes and caps at the start of the primary side are mainly for filtering out the noise from the power supply from getting back out on the power lines, rather than smoothing the power coming into the power supply (that's done mostly by the bulk capacitor, but also more finely on the secondary side). Also the "double-coil" inductor next to the bulk cap isn't mainly for current-limiting, it's known as a common-mode transformer (or common-mode choke, both terms can be googled), and is also for keeping certain forms of noise inside the PSU, in this case common-mode noise (hence the name).
@sajivsingh56013 жыл бұрын
@COFASA Uhhhh...That is the main purpose the PSU is there for. If it is good at that then I guess it is good.....
@everythingfeline73673 жыл бұрын
@@sajivsingh5601 yes, but efficiency doesn't matter if the power output is garbage in quality. That quality is very important for sensitive electronics
@glenndoiron93173 жыл бұрын
Actually, one of the most important things that a power supply can do, is to NOT blow up your system if there is a failure. I had a friend come over a few weeks back with a PC that was no longer turning on (PC was about 10 years old). It had an Antec power supply, and one of the 12V rails was briefly spiking up to almost 13V on powerup, but the built in overvoltage protection would immediately shut down the supply. He had been having problems with phantom shutdowns for a few months, but it had become so common as to be unusable a few days before he brought it down for repair. No other hardware was damaged, it was just a case of replacing the power supply (and reinstalling Windows, as the image had been corrupted to the point of bluescreening with the random early startup power losses.) PSU's need to have overvoltage fault protection like this. Back around '96, for my first new PC I purchased a generic AT pentium prebuilt (from a local shop, everything was off-brand in that system except for the processor and hard disk); several years later it failed, and the power supply decided to commit suicide and take the motherboard, ram, and video card along for the ride. After that point I decided I would never use anything but Antec or Enermax power supplies for anything else. I subsequently have had some of these power supplies die, but they have never taken out any other components along with them. I would guess that every power supply has this protection built in these days (since its part of the ATX PSU spec), but it would be nice to test it to see if its working as intended.
@tanishqbhaiji1033 жыл бұрын
And they said power cleanup for the PC is done at the input X-Y caps and Inductors 😂😂
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Noted and passed on to Stone!
@thatsgottahurt3 жыл бұрын
You all definitely earned a Titanium 80+ certification for efficiency in explaining power supplies. Have 0% interest in this Dell PSU, but this was the most interesting video ive seen in while. Thanks, cant wait to you guys progress on this type of testing eviews.
@futureb1ues3 жыл бұрын
"We know that no one's actually buying this thing standalone..." ::Stares in K-12 IT::
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Ha, yeah, that's about the target audience!
@futureb1ues3 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus In all honesty, buying these things standalone from dell is difficult. You need a dedicated dell business account rep, they'll ask for a service tag of the model you need a PSU for because they have >100 different PSUs in all form factors, and then they'll tell you multiple times they can't find it before suddenly finding it and shipping you the wrong form-factor twice before getting the right one, all the while offering to sell you a new machine instead. However, if you have the same machine under a "ProSupport Plus" warranty, they have no problem finding the exact PSU and shipping it overnight.
@MikeStavola3 жыл бұрын
@@futureb1ues Yeah, my company just scraps Dell systems when their power supplies blow out. It's nearly impossible to get replacement parts from them. They usually fail during power surges. Sometimes when someone accidentally ruins 48V through a serial or USB port.
@JETWTF3 жыл бұрын
@@futureb1ues That's the whole idea behind Dells proprietary parts. To keep government and business into Dell's little ecosystem. Sadly your district probably wont allow you to swap systems to standard parts. The one I worked for did that, bulk ordered parts and had junior high and high school students put them together with IT then slowly replaced the elementary schools PC's over a couple years.
@mechy2k20003 жыл бұрын
@@MikeStavola they don't get replacements on amazon? Although by the time a psu goes it's been a few years probably
@qT_p133 жыл бұрын
Turns out Intel's keynote was more beneficial to you than they could have imagined. Back to you, Steve.
@cnogo333 жыл бұрын
I'm glad to see the "Thanks Steve" transitions from the Intel video in use. Absolutely perfect.
@falxonPSN3 жыл бұрын
Any video with MOSFET discussion gets an upvote from this Electrical Engineer. Well done, Patrick!
@zachnilsson46823 жыл бұрын
Love seeing the other team members in videos
@Paul_Sleeping3 жыл бұрын
Just want to mention it again how happy I'm to have found your channel after HardOCP folded. It really replaced everything I used to get from that site. Love your informative channel. Appreciate the hard work from Patrick Stone. Thanks and back to you, Steve. Never knew Liteon makes PSU too. I remember fondly though how great their optical drives were back in the days. I have always felt Dell systems are well built and hardly breaks. I often recommend Dell Optiplex line for my clients. Now it's great to know one reason why.
@draxrdax73216 ай бұрын
Yeah, i remember back in the early 2000's i had so many cd and dvd players that failed, most of them LG, Samsung, TEAC etc. But i had a LiteOn DVD-RW that lasted me for years, and i've written a lot of discs with it. This left me with a very good impression on this company, and heard many people having similar opinions.
@phxtravis3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Steve!
@shellsterdude3 жыл бұрын
Having experienced two catastrophic PSU failures in my life (One starting a fire, the other killing every platter drive in my NAS to the tune of $7000 in hardware), I really appreciate that someone is now doing comprehensive PSU testing. Just FYI, the garbage PSU's I was using were branded (Gigabyte for the one that caught on fire, Rosewell for the one that died and over-volted/ or over-currented frying all my hard-drives). In both cases, it seems that the transformers broke down, from the limited autopsy that I did. Since then I've learned my lesson and I have been buying way-overspec'd EVGA power-supplies. Assuming EVGA knows what they are doing, but I guess we will soon find out...
@zfrenchy17163 жыл бұрын
8:58 the wave form is called "square wave" not rectangular. happy to help.
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Passed the feedback along to Stone. Thanks.
@les31713 жыл бұрын
It depends if you are referring to current or voltage. Most forward, half bridge or full bridge buck isolated stepdown switch-mode power supplies (apart from discontinuous types such as flybacks) have a PWM squareware voltage measured with respect to primary ground on the primary input to energy storage inductor and a contiunous sawtooth current in that inductor.
@jacobstraessle58743 жыл бұрын
Brings back memories as a tv repair technician. I've had to repair numerous tv power supplies that work just like the one described here. On another note: Dell computers are only useful for business applications where they will be thrown out and replaced with new ones as needed. They are not geared towards the general public as they can't be upgraded, which as you described, is a shame.
@Saki6303 жыл бұрын
18:30 "...Lack of any 80Plus branding." Goes back in time to 4:58 and you see 80-Plus-Platinum.
@WayStedYou3 жыл бұрын
And 21:53
@isbestlizard3 жыл бұрын
Probably one of their rack power supplies, tweaked a bit to hush it up
@marwinthedja54503 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I thought. No way Dell spent money to get a PSU of this quality designed just to get something proprietary.
@YeOldeTraveller3 жыл бұрын
Likely with cheaper parts substituted where possible.
@_--_--_3 жыл бұрын
@@YeOldeTraveller Yeah the "Elite" bulk cap in their server PSU variation would be probably a Nichicon or Nippon CC.
@fabiofoltran43613 жыл бұрын
Ain't those psu made by delta? I havent seen the video but if is made by them Its bulletproof..if they mounted quality components
@piotrzesa57213 жыл бұрын
@@fabiofoltran4361 Liteon
@Epsilonsama3 жыл бұрын
This look like a propietary version of server PSU. This is probably used on Dell server products which is why it's actually good. Dell business line is pretty good.
@valkaielod3 жыл бұрын
Server PSUs are way above this. T30 might use something similar, not the proper servers.
@GodZefir3 жыл бұрын
Definitely excited for more PSU reviews, will be great to have something to watch when I'm looking to buy my next one.
@mackal3 жыл бұрын
Dell has probably been using PSUs like this for awhile, probably costs too much (or they just have too much stock) to switch toe AVX12VO. At some point that should tip in favor of switching though.
@TheCrankyCow3 жыл бұрын
I have a feeling the PSU& motherboard are used in dells' business/server options and it's just cheaper to make the home PC fit what the majority of there business is.
@darthkarl993 жыл бұрын
Nah, Dells been using custom proprietary stuff including PSU's since at least the Pentium II days.
@zoravar.k79043 жыл бұрын
Nah, dell likes to lock their business customers into their ecosystem. They're also stingy about shipping replacements, they'll always try to sell you a new system.
@WildkatPhoto3 жыл бұрын
Its more evil than that. People like to drone on about Apple locking you in but Dell really locks you in and it must be profitable because HP has gone the same way. I have an HP Z220 (i7 3770) that I got referbed and turned into a low end gamer/Hackintosh and it has all standard ATX parts. Fast forward to today and they are doing the same thing Dell does with custom PSUs, off size motherboards and proprietary connectors. The entire supply chain has a vested interest in preventing reuse of electronics. AS long as Im careful with it, my old HP will be usable for decades. PSU dies? Get any ATX standard as a replacement. CPU dies? Drop in another 3xxx series. Lightening fries everything? I can still put new guts into the case and call it a sleeper. Each time I do that I am denying some part of the supply chain a sale so they are all more than happy to go along with Dell, HP and others in making non replaceable parts. Im a hardcore Apple guy from back in the Apple ][ days and Apple is just as guilty but the difference is that most of the time Apple is doing it because the entire system is non-standard. Its not like they are intentionally going off ATX to make an iMac. No one is complaining about Dell or HP laptops having custom connectors either. Heck Ill even give them a break on Alienware and Omen systems in cool looking cases that can only happen with custom parts. But when you take a bog standard box and intentionally cripple it by going ever so slightly off ATX, you are just showing how evil you are.
@BrianHG.Ocean.Fitness3 жыл бұрын
@18:50, changing the vertical scale of the 'Power Watts' in your chart to a logarithmic scale might show you a more meaningful comparison between power in and power out across 0% load and up. Just something you may try and see what it looks like.
@chuckthomas18723 жыл бұрын
That has to be the best PSU description / explanation I have ever seen , I love when I actually learn something. Thank You Patrick, and Steve..
@felixjochems12383 жыл бұрын
Maybe a small tip, but if people ever do this in the future. Please remember that the capacitor can keep charge for quite a while!
@AndrewFremantle3 жыл бұрын
If it doesn't have a discharge resistor, sure. Since it's being sold by a huge company with liability concerns, odds are they didn't decide to skip that particular 5-cent component.
@mjc09613 жыл бұрын
@@AndrewFremantle Did you watch the video about the rest of this PC? And the way they cheaped out on this PSU by making it proprietary instead of using the 12VO standard? Odd are they _DID_ decide to skip that particular 5-cent component.
@The_Keeper3 жыл бұрын
In any case, better safe than dead.
@JohnWiku3 жыл бұрын
@@AndrewFremantle It wouldn't surprise me that cheap PSUs skip that critical safety resistor, however I spotted it in this particular PSU, shame that the non standard format makes it useless outside of this line of systems.
@_--_--_3 жыл бұрын
@@AndrewFremantle "Small" correction, 0.01 cent component (yes they are really that cheap). And i have personally never seen any power supply, not even the cheapest backstreet chinese ones that arent anywhere close to being FCC or CE compliant that dont have discharge resistors on their bulk caps. The times where this was relevant was 40+ years ago, when SMD wasnt a thing and a resistor did cost 1. a couple cents to a couple dozen cents and 2. occupied some worthwhile physical space. But at that time this wasnt nearly as relevant, as switching power supplies werent really a thing, thus no high voltage caps in most devices.
@krumpetwithhoney85673 жыл бұрын
I normally listen to Steve to help me sleep, no joke, I sleep to KZbin videos every night (I have really bad tinnitus). But this other guy, oh man, he knocked me out in seconds...
@spladam38453 жыл бұрын
Thanks Steve. This is when I whish we could "like" videos more than once. The value we get from this channel is awesome, the work you guys do is quality and appreciated, I'll say it again easily the best PC hardware channel on the youtubes. As a fellow electronics tinkerer Patrick's presentations are great and it's refreshing to see a tech youtuber speaking my language, well done. Your videos are a break of sanity for us in an insane world, and you have me rolling with the Computex references. Thanks guys. Back to you Steve.
@peejay19813 жыл бұрын
When testing voltage regulation you also need to rapidly and randomly vary the load on the output - TiN explained it once when you were visiting him and KINGPIN
@samvega8273 жыл бұрын
I've been ready for this content, I'm excited to have you guy's teach me about power supplies. I've honestly learned a lot from your channel and a couple others it's cool to see how things work.
@jamesogle993 жыл бұрын
Please please more in depth PSU reviews. Now that Jonnyguru is gone, it’s tough to find a real in-depth PSU review with actual quality testing. The skill and equipment required aren’t common. Great job guys!
@jonsmith19143 жыл бұрын
I love the idea of you guys doing PS testing and reviews. They are IMO the most overlooked piece of hardware when specing out a PC build but often times one of the most important. Couple that with no one in the PC reviewer space doing any thing like this makes you guys unique. This is awesome guys! Good work!
@gamershadow13 жыл бұрын
Are you guys checking for creepage and clearance guidelines for safety? I know some PSUs fail it hard.
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Sending this comment over to Stone so he can take note of it. I'm actually not sure on the answer for that -- he did a lot of testing, so maybe, but I'll ask him to look into this comment for future pieces if not!
@jurczakc3 жыл бұрын
As a PCB designer by day PSU design is mundane but incredibly hard to get right... If these are built to UL or CE there are decent creep age and clearance requirements...
@phyotyla3 жыл бұрын
A few comments about the electronics part: @8:49 The inductor is not for current limiting. The active PFC is usually a boost converter controlled in a particular way and most likely the inductor and the bulk cap are parts of that boost circuit. The two APFC MOSFETs mentioned at 10:29 are the "diode" and "switch" of the boost converter. Alternatively if the inductor is indeed directly connected to the bulk cap without anything between them, the cap and the inductor form an LC-filter. @9:51 The input power quality doesn't really matter to the power supply. The smoothing for the output voltage happens later in the circuit. The protection and the power factor correction are there to protect the grid from the power supply because switch-mode power supplies without filtering etc. would be horrible noise sources to the grid. @11:26 The components referred to as "protection circuits" based on the markings seem to be 2 milli-ohm resistors which are probably shunt resistors to measure output currents to facilitate over current protection. Yes, they are protection circuits but it would be more informative to say that they are for over-current/over-power protection.
@sp3lllz3 жыл бұрын
This is what frustrates me the most about dell their engineers clearly know what they’re doing but it all gets ruined as usual by suits who have no idea what they’re doing making weird form-factors for arbitrary reasons and slapping predatory sales tactics for warranties on sales if they actually stuck to normal standards and didn’t send you notifications in your sleep asking you if you want a warranty it would actually be a pretty good buy honestly.
@viet0ne3 жыл бұрын
Actually there is a reason why these kinds of things exist, they seem to be re-used components from their enterprise hardware and server rack hardware is some of the most non-standsrd stuff you will ever encounter. Most brands moved away from desktop style PSU because single space servers would never fit them. The reason why is clearly shown here, the PSU is very efficient because when you're putting equipment at datacenter scale, even small percentages in efficiency can result in significant gains when you're talking about thousands of servers. The controversial decision is more along was it a good decision to bring this to their consumer devices.
@sixcoregamer92213 жыл бұрын
I have one 250 Watt TFX Chieftec PSU and two 300 Watt TFX Chieftec PSUs. The 250 watt is not rated because it has low PFC but all three TFX PSUs are almost silver (90%) efficiency. Chieftec also sells a 500 Watt ATX PSU with terrible efficiency (less than 80 Plus white). I rarely see crappy TFX PSUs. I would love to get the Seasonic 300W mini-TFX PSU for a SFF PC.
@jayp4real3 жыл бұрын
Just got an email from Newegg saying that Gigabyte is now taking returns or exchanges for PSUs in a certain range of serial numbers. Great job GN!
@mehdimido52703 жыл бұрын
I guess "thanks Steve" and "back to you Steve" memes are here to stay
@le_travie77243 жыл бұрын
It hasn't gotten old yet. I'm sure they'll get rid of it eventually
@Wootguy2383 жыл бұрын
Good, good.
@bernds65873 жыл бұрын
@@le_travie7724 I hope they get rid of it at the moment intel produced another weird keynote with more and better meme-potential snips. You can literally see it.
@iamtheforce143 жыл бұрын
These power supply test are exactly what I want to see more of. Particularly the current stability with ripple and regulation testing. Love the work!
@sumikomei3 жыл бұрын
"Thanks Steve" made me giggle way too much
@8bit_coder3 жыл бұрын
I've been looking forward to these kind of videos for a long time now, no other youtuber does power supply testing, let alone this in depth and in such an informative way! This will go a long way to help show which power supply brands are trustworthy and what to look out for.
@ducksducks90063 жыл бұрын
So im going to study electrical engineering in august, i will watch this video again after im done, keep up the good work!
@arjunyg46553 жыл бұрын
The first PSU review was the reason I subscribed to GN! Hoping to see more of these more technical component reviews.
@darkSorceror3 жыл бұрын
Very important thing not mentioned in the video: PSU capacitors store a LOT of charge. Don't take your PSU apart for any reason unless you are sure you have safely discharged them. They could literally kill you.
@mtucker67843 жыл бұрын
Definitely a great piece to know.
@ufoisback50883 жыл бұрын
That really should be explained more explicitly than some legal notice "don't do that at home".
@ram895723 жыл бұрын
@@ufoisback5088 Well it probably wouldn't hurt if nature and fate were able to hand out a few more Darwin awards these days. If you don't cull the stupid from society then they propagate more stupid which then adds even more stupid and you soon end up with current society where you have people who need to be explicitly informed that "dangerous thing is dangerous."
@SamichHunter3 жыл бұрын
Love this addition to your test suite. As many have said, looking forward to more P/S testing/reviews. Just a FYI, when I was learning how circuits work it always helped me to have a block diagram with an overall view of the stages of the circuit so that I could go from general theory to detailed. This may help others to better understand the overall view.
@manfredbans39753 жыл бұрын
Did you miss the "80 Plus Platinum" Label at 4:53? Does it meet the requirements for that?
@Ragestyles3 жыл бұрын
yes he did
@rdoursenaud3 жыл бұрын
Yep, they clearly missed it. And so did I. Based on their testing results I’d say it barely passes if you take into account tolerances and potential measurement errors. Remember that only a proper lab with calibrated equipment, trained staff and vetted procedures can assert that with any level of certainty.
@manfredbans39753 жыл бұрын
@@rdoursenaud 1. Maybe you missed it, but you were watching a video. It's not your job to check every claim they make. They worked for hours with that device, I am still surprised.... 2. I think, the rating is missing. Steve only told us "It is close to 80Plus Titanium", but did it reach "Platinum", "Gold" or whatever? I think, that would be helpfull. But this video is to practice the procedure -> next time!
@rdoursenaud3 жыл бұрын
@@manfredbans3975 1. It’s always my/your job to check any claim made! How else would I prevent bullshit from entering my reasoning? "Trust but verify". 2. The answer (and Gamer’s Nexus mistake about the unit not being 80 Plus branded) is at 18:33. The measurements meet (exceed) Platinum level and are not quite Titanium. So the unit exceeds every 80 Plus supersets except the most stringent one. On the other hand, I find this metallurgy analogy confusing and unnecessary. This benefits more Ecos Consulting’s bottom line than the consumer. Hence my flawed guess in my previous answer (I confused the levels).
@michamaecki81043 жыл бұрын
10:40 this inductor is actually part of active PFC, and doesn't smooth input current. Instead it stores energy when shorted to ground via mosfets, and gives it back when transistors are closed bumping voltage to 380-430VDC. APFC is a boost converter, that consists of transistor, inductor and a diode.
@NZOCD3 жыл бұрын
It’s a pity that the only powerful thing about Dell PCs is the power supply itself.
@Dreddy723 жыл бұрын
a testament to the psu being the most likely cause of fire if made improperly. as long as its not in a nzzxt case... i mean uh... no i got nothing.
@bitelaserkhalif3 жыл бұрын
And that's seems to be the case with OEM PSU, drawbacks is proprietary PSU
@JohnWiku3 жыл бұрын
This is actually a new thing for me, since all the prebuilts I've ever seen always carried the crappiest PSU that were humanly possible to be manufactured. Shame that a good thing, for a change, is spoiled by non standard specs.
@staryoke3 жыл бұрын
NZOC - ??? Im pretty sure the CPUs and RAM are good (made to a decent standard) too.
@NoKiddingBoss3 жыл бұрын
@@JohnWiku most if not all oem pc's comes with high quality psu's. Sure they may look like generic junk on the outside but those badboys are on par with your regular 80+ bronze at minimum. This is not a new trend, its standard industry practice.
@ZadesLegacy3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing power supply reviews. Not enough people are doing detailed high quality video reviews of them like you are trying to now.
@darthvader67373 жыл бұрын
The electrical engineer in me loved this! Would love more videos like this of other PC components.
@popcorny0073 жыл бұрын
Fantastic work, you've perfectly condensed the intricacies of PSUs down into an easy to view & understand piece. This is certainly the best explanation & testing I've seen so far, keep it up!
@SarkkiKarkki3 жыл бұрын
This is an interesting new category of content, I hope to see you do SFX PSU testing too just to see what kind of compromises must be done for the smaller form factor.
@Deltarious3 жыл бұрын
This was excellent, and it has me very much looking forward towards some more...shall we say, explosive...power supply content from you guys in the future!
@thearchitecturalgamer66523 жыл бұрын
Honestly, that was really cool, and also surpising lol
@2014Geek0083 жыл бұрын
oh yes - show me more PSU testing! I am quite fascinated with the operation of a PSU so this video helps reveal more of what happens inside that component. Patrick Stone is well spoken and his explanations were easy to follow. Your testing seems well done as always. Looking forward to the next video on this!
@prudentComments3 жыл бұрын
a few tests are missing: transient response, dynamic load and the time the psu can supply the components with power when the primary side has an interruption. Otherwise good first effort!
@conza19893 жыл бұрын
This is so awesome to see the emergence of what will no doubt become, the pre-eminent PSU testing outlet, it's really really exciting, take all the time you need guys it'll be worth it, have been looking forward to this for years, we'll keep waiting until you guys are ready :)
@SuperBrainAK3 жыл бұрын
Patrick please read this! Please do research on how APFC works. To put it simply it is a boost converter, consisting of the yellow ferrite inductor, diode and mosfet. The rectified AC is only slightly smoothed by a ~1uF capacitor and then the boost converter raises and lowers its PWM to consume more and less current based on the voltage waveform of the AC, that way it can fake a unity power factor as best as possible and also step up the voltage to ~400v to allow higher efficiency and universal voltage capability. The inductor is not a simple "current limiter" its the inductor that the boost circuit is using to store the power.
@泉こなた-t2q3 жыл бұрын
The Connector Extractor is what i needed for Years, thanks dude
@matthewpalmer98203 жыл бұрын
It's probably an adapted server power supply
@jotatsu3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, looks like a 2U psu. For them i think it is cheaper, server PSU specially from last generations are really cheap, they probably have a couple hunded thousands doing nothing in some werehouse.
@michalism.64133 жыл бұрын
Go crazy on these PSUs teardowns and reviews and love to see more of them! Nobody reviews PSUs you've got absolutely ZERO competition there.
@samgoff52893 жыл бұрын
I feel like Patrick Stone and Buildzoid could go to a scrapyard together and build a budget supercomputer in a couple of days
@Fix_It_Again_Tony3 жыл бұрын
Great content. The rundown on the function of the internal components was awesome. Part of my job is designing flyback power supplies for industrial control modules. Computer power supplies are also typically flyback topologies. Flybacks are great because they provide isolation and the ability to easily generate multiple voltage rails. The filtering on the AC input side of the power supply does prevent noise from making its way into the power supply (conducted susceptibility), but just as important is preventing harmonics of the switching frequency from making it OUT of the power supply and back on to the grid. This is part of the conducted emissions compliance that the power supply must meet before getting the CE mark or other regulatory approval like FCC Part 15. Switching power supplies are extremely noisy, especially at 100's of watts. When the MOSFET on the primary side of the transformer turns on and off based on commands from the PWM controller it generates noise and that noise is suppressed by the inductors, chokes and caps. Those MOSFETs on the secondary side of the transformers are interesting. They must be in an "ideal diode" configuration. Diodes have a typical forward voltage drop of 0.3 to 0.7 volts. This is a big deal for efficiency because this voltage drop multiplied by the secondary current (500W / 12V = ~42 amps) is the power lost in the diodes. An ideal diode is a circuit using a MOSFET and other components to act like a diode, but with 0 forward voltage drop. This increases the efficiency of the power supply by reducing losses in the secondary rectifier diodes to near 0. Less losses mean less power in for the same power out. I think your testing is good. I would like to see a step load test to measure transient response. I don't know if the Intel spec covers this, but basically you load a power supply to some low-ish % or rated load (33% lets say) and then switch the load rapidly to a high current (say 66%) and observe the response of the voltage. It will initially dip, and then the PWM controller will increase the duty cycle to the primary MOSFET to output more power. The voltage typically overshoots the setpoint (12V) and then the PWM controller reduces the duty cycle and the output voltage settles. You want the power supply to respond quickly (minimize the dip) with minimal overshoot. Along with this testing it would be interesting to know the switching frequency. You could measure this on the output side of the transformer with your oscilloscope.
@Pseudotaxus343 жыл бұрын
Hey Gamers Nexus Team, for power supply testing videos where you open the unit up - a general "do not try this at home" warning for viewers not to open their own power supply due to the possibility of injury or death from electrocution I think would go a long way and be the ethical thing to do, even if all your normal viewers would already know to do this
@daveninjaneuro70893 жыл бұрын
Hi Dad
@PatrikKron3 жыл бұрын
I agree, there should be a warning in the video. I had no idea how dangerous a psu could be until around a month ago when I stumbled upon that information. Previously I just thought you should not tinker with them since the risk of breaking something that could become dangerous once power got plugged in again.
@ProjectMysticApostolate3 жыл бұрын
Your work is always interesting to me. Even if it's long form due to the complexity and depth I will watch every minute of it Steve. I learned a lot from you more than I learned in my hardware major in my IT school. I appreciate your hard work GN. Keep it up.
@_stevek3 жыл бұрын
We need real power supply testing videos. This is one of the most overlooked parts to building a pc and nobody really does this on youtube. Everywhere on the internet people just try to scare you into buying the most expensive power supply you can buy. It would be really nice to know what is the best power supply for the value and why. Right now everyone just recommends the corsair cx and if you read comments on reddit or other places every other 80+ bronze power supply is going to blow up your system.
@siripfreely3 жыл бұрын
There's quite a few other bronze units I've seen recommended on reddit though. XPG Pylon, EVGA BQ, some CM MWE variants, Corsair CXM and CXF, to name a few. And it depends on the budget. The CX is possibly the best bronze unit but it costs more as well.
@downnnnnn3 жыл бұрын
The EVGA B5 is pretty decent as well. It’s not great, but it’s still better than the BR and BQ series
@rdoursenaud3 жыл бұрын
I’d personally trust Seasonic at any efficiency. They tend to use higher end components compared to other brands and are put together very well.
@downnnnnn3 жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t, seasonic has pretty overpriced units, also there focus plus series has some tripping issues with ampere
@rdoursenaud3 жыл бұрын
@@downnnnnn Tripping issues mean that the protection circuitry works. That’s a plus in my book. Current spikes are supposed to be handled on the card side. That’s a card fault rather than a PSU one. The prices can be a bit steep but that is the cost of quality components. Depends on your priorities.
@c24bear3 жыл бұрын
I like how you presented all data and found it very interesting. I look forward to seeing what you do.
@S85B50Engine3 жыл бұрын
*THE FOLLOWING PROCEDURE WAS DONE BY A TRAINED PROFESSIONAL, DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME*
@Arudis4x3 жыл бұрын
There's no way I'm the only person who's asshole puckered as he was pointing w/ that screwdriver
@S85B50Engine3 жыл бұрын
@@Arudis4x not gonna lie, my ass was clenching during that, it was terrifying to see him poke around with a screwdriver.
@josuad68903 жыл бұрын
yeah seriously. don't just go around poking at bare PSU. touch the wrong thing and you might get zapped from a high voltage that might be left in some caps ot something.
@EmergencyChannel3 жыл бұрын
If you haven't been zapped by AC, you haven't done enough tinkering.
@S85B50Engine3 жыл бұрын
@@EmergencyChannel bold of you to assume I've never been zapped by 220v AC or got a nasty burn from dropping a soldering iron. These things need to be handled with care because it hurts a lot when you don't
@mauricioyoung66683 жыл бұрын
I’ve learned so many things from you guys that I never would’ve been interested in otherwise. Thank you!
@IIGrayfoxII3 жыл бұрын
Dell have never stuck to the ATX standard. Even their ATX ones dont use the correct colors, and at times their pinout is not the same.
@staryoke3 жыл бұрын
Not true! Their workstations before Sandy Bridge (Core 2nd generation +) used standard ATX. Take any Precision workstation prior to Sandy Bridge - t3500, t5500, t7500 , t7400s etc could be swapped with PSUs off-the-shelf. HP and Lenovo were the same. Dell wised-up.
@IIGrayfoxII3 жыл бұрын
@@staryoke Dell used their own color code though Yellow was not +12v, red was not +5v, orange was not +3.3v
@staryoke3 жыл бұрын
@@IIGrayfoxII ??? Color coding wires uniquely doesnt make it NOT standard ATX. If that was the case, all third party aftermarket PSU makers (EVGA, ASUS, PowerColor, Corsair, Enermax, Seasonic, etc) would NOT meet "your" definition of "standard ATX". C'mon stop trolling. Go learn a thing-or-two about what makes a PSU meet standard ATX power requirements. LOL
@IIGrayfoxII3 жыл бұрын
@@staryoke The ATX color coding is apart of the standard. Yellow is +12v Red is +5v Orange is +3.3v White was -5v(no longer apart of the ATX2.x standard) Blue is -12v Green is PWR_ON Gray is PWR_OK Black is ground Purple is +5vSB High end PSU that we gamers get technically do not meet the standard due to this. But when it is not a high end PSU but a basic one. having orange be +5 and purple be +12v will throw you off if you're unaware of dell doing this
@staryoke3 жыл бұрын
@@IIGrayfoxII "High end PSU that we gamers get technically do not meet the standard due to this." LOL! C'mon! I think you should put out a trade paper stating this and listing the PSU makers by name. First you would receive a cease-and-desist for libel and slander and then your ass would get sued into the ground - and rightfully so. Clearly youre not an electrical engineer, because you wouldnt have made such a stupid statement with a straight face - unless youre just trolling! The colors of the wires are an industry suggestion, not a requirement. More important is the gauge and quality on hand (at the time of manufacturing). Color is secondary to those requirements. Contact any of the aforementioned manufacturers, they will tell you that.
@brucepreston39273 жыл бұрын
Im ready for some more psu testing! I'm glad to see this finally getting started! I've been watch GN for years now and it's amazing how much the channel has grown and matured :)
@aznwierdone3 жыл бұрын
this was quite good. i'd recommend a viewer warning to be wary of disassembling power supplies, since those caps are rather massive, and could certainly cause some serious injury. i'm looking very forward to new content presented with the GN clarity, especially since PSU reviews can be particularly dry and difficult to parse. it might be worth considering a basic "how PSUs work" that can always be referred back to as well, with a few graphs showing how the power waveform gets affected throughout a simplified PSU, and what is and is not desirable.
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! We'll probably do one of those once we get more experience with what sort of stuff needs more clarification. We'll base that on common questions in comments!
@zeli3 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus also it’s worth including a block diagram in the PSU video (as suggested by @neobleidd) and explain some of the terminology (e.g. PFC) in there, as they are music to my ear (a trained electronic engineer) but as far as I believe not to most people.
@aznwierdone3 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus welp looks like LTT might have beaten you to the punch (^: if they've got "turbo nerd edition", i fully expect a gn style "ludicrous nerd edition"
@havanowoncheese3 жыл бұрын
holy shit! So I have seen PSU reviews on websites and reading them is hard without knowing some of this stuff more in depth. This was informative and in depth while being accessible. Steve and crew, you guys just keep getting better and better. I look forward to more PSU videos as engaging as this.
@LastSecBloomer3 жыл бұрын
This format of PSUs is common in server machines and, as such, they tend to be good quality and made by reputable OEMs such as Delta, for example...even if they look "uncool" for modern hardware beauty standards. Dell, also being in the server business, probably uses some of the hardware they comission for their servers in prebuilts too, like this PSU. That practice also has an ugly side, like weird layouts and proprietary hardware we see in their (and HP's too) prebuild desktops...
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
Great feedback and information. Thanks!
@gg-gn3re3 жыл бұрын
It's about double the width of the server line, probably to reduce noise. Also with no pcb card connector. As far as internals it looks completely redesigned vs those. e.g. kzbin.info/www/bejne/mp-nXq2XhN-hiNE again, probably for noise.
@robertsneddon7313 жыл бұрын
Server PSUs are normally rated for much higher power delivery than the nominal 500W output of this Dell desktop power supply -- for example a twin-EPYC 2U server will have multiple redundant 1400W PSUs. Modern manufacturing lines can produce small runs of "custom" units in a cost-effective manner based off existing circuit designs that simply need a bit of tweaking to meet the desired specification and this is probably the reason for the design of this particular PSU. Badly designed power supplies with iffy components that fail hard can cause system damage which leads to warranty repairs, product recalls and in the worst case fires, explosions and interruptions to KZbin video recordings. The small cost of designing and manufacturing a decent and safe power supply for even a lower-end system is outweighed by the bad press and downstream costs when the makers get it wrong (see Gigabyte's rebadged explodey-bricks for a recent worked example).
@nukacolared3 жыл бұрын
I always love learning more about how tech works. Surprised that I took three physics classes in high school and one in college, yet I still have little clue of how electricity works. It probably didn't help that those topics were at the backend of the curriculum, and so ended up being not focused on enough or at all. And its not the kind of thing your average person talks about. But, yea. I always love these videos were you give a bit of a lesson on tech and how certain things work. You and your team certainly know how to explain this kind of stuff in a way that gives others a chance at understanding the basic concept, and even encourage them to find out more and not be so intimidated by the topic. Many people I have seen seem to often forget how complicated some of this stuff is when trying to explain it to a noob.
@thepolticalone9613 жыл бұрын
I'm waiting for the gigabyte PSU review
@cyberceel3 жыл бұрын
I guess that they delayed it so they could use the new testing equipment
@GamersNexus3 жыл бұрын
It's been in endurance testing for a few weeks now! Should be ready soon.
@thepolticalone9613 жыл бұрын
@@cyberceel seems that way. GN do great work. I can wait
@thepolticalone9613 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus can't wait man
@AndrewFremantle3 жыл бұрын
@@GamersNexus You're implying it hasn't exploded. Where' the kaboom? There was supposed to be an earth-shattering Kaboom!!
@philipsills52983 жыл бұрын
Great video. I am an engineer and understand electronics but still really enjoyed his description and testing. Looking forward to more of these on one of my favourite channels.
@jonesymate5813 жыл бұрын
I was fully expecting "you can literally see it" when he took the outer casing off. Imagine my disappointment.
@benwp41793 жыл бұрын
This is great. I enjoy your tear downs and going through all the parts. Your videos have helped to build my knowledge of computers. Thank you for all the hard work.
@WeeManXL3 жыл бұрын
As an electronic professional I thought Patrick did a great job explaining the basic functionality of all the circuits needed to get a computer, or pretty much anything, working these days. I had teachers that knew less than that and couldn't explain a psu to save their lives. 😂 Next stop: budget firecrackers, extinguished with LN2!
@Marty_NZ3 жыл бұрын
This was really refreshing to watch. I used to spend all my time in mid 2000s looking at PSU reviews, just to find that golden cheap nugget with Seasonic on the inside.
@Revenant_Knight3 жыл бұрын
Dude you’re getting a Dell! I’m sorry for your loss...
@HelmutKohlrabi3 жыл бұрын
Back to you, Steve. Never gets old.
@dont19733 жыл бұрын
It would be better to have a video dedicated to explaining how a PSU works prior to posting a PSU review rather than putting both in one video. The explanation part of how a PSU works here is quick and dirty and would benefit having a longer video focusing solely on this topic as it is interesting enough to be featured on its own.
@TheDrunkenBeard3 жыл бұрын
The new opening sound effects sound so good on my phone. When the bass hits my phone rumbles. Love it!
@ricdintino95023 жыл бұрын
Linus must feel threatened. Now HE'S done a "power supply basics" video too.
@mtucker67843 жыл бұрын
This was well laid out, great presentations and thanks for the explanation about how power supplies actually work. I rarely ever thought about rails, ever. Thanks guys, keep up the great work, I love learning!
@S1lentSt0rm3 жыл бұрын
Naturally having a standards compliant component in a system is totally unacceptable. Everyone knows that (duh). As such they had to modify that slightly so it wouldn't meet the standard anymore, even if it costs extra.
@aj.arunkumar3 жыл бұрын
1 standards compliant component is too much goodness no mortal consumer should be allowed to enjoy
@losergamer043 жыл бұрын
Best damn power supply video I've ever seen. While I know the words he used I am too far removed from my classes to remember how it all works. Great explanation, Patrik Stone.
@dontmatter44233 жыл бұрын
The memes from intel's presentation should be used every video until their next one
@DeckDogs4Life3 жыл бұрын
Your ads for the EVGA Z20 and then when Linus had that video where EVGA was doing 50% off on them convinced me to buy one. I can say, I'm not disappointed.
@MmntechCa3 жыл бұрын
This is like putting a Honda Earth Dreams engine into a Yugo. Efficient, reliable power, just too bad everything else is garbage.
@ram895723 жыл бұрын
I don't know if I would call the Earth Dreams engine reliable at all considering all the issues people were having with severe oil dilution problems because the engine doesn't heat up enough on short trips. And then the fix Honda deployed to those people basically killing the amount of heat the heater could output in order to try to get the engine to proper operating temp faster.
@Stuen4y3 жыл бұрын
This is an absolutely excellent warm-up video in terms of PSU reviews. Old-school media outlets (TechPowerup, RIP jonnyguru.com, etc) that do in-depth PSU reviews usually assume prior knowledge to some extend by the people that go to the trouble of reading about the transient response, ripple, and inrush current of a black box with no "direct" impact on the performance of the PC at the bottom of one's case one changes every 5-15 years if the right purchase is made. Presenting the important bits about a power supply and explaining WHY they are important in a friendly, slightly processed way is a great way to engage with and educate a wider audience and convey important information about PSUs in general. Thank you for the dedication GN (not just Steve at this point, the whole team cares a ton about all they do!). In terms of feedback for data presentation - graphs with outlines for the standard that the PSU complies with and the actual performance are a must for an in-depth review. For example, for voltage regulation, you'd add the maximum and minimum permitted tolerance around the target say 12V and then the measured voltage throughout the load spectrum. You showed this on the scope but people that would not know how to read it need more guidance in my opinion. This is data that can easily compare multiple products in the same price and power range and instruct of the performance of each of them once you have data from multiple data points. For me, each time when I've purchased a power supply, I've always stuck with an OEM manufacturer I trust and checked reviews to see if the Fan Curve fits my standards for quiet operation and that everything else is not just within spec but well within spec. I also always have a look at the manufacturer of the fan as it's likely the thing that will fail first in a high-quality PSU and there was no comment in this case, only the size was mentioned. I liked the comments about the capacitors source as this is something that has great implications for the longevity of the product. I would have liked a discussion about the temperature rating as it is a great indication as to the quality of the electrolytic capacitors. Branding was discussed which is good, we all know we want Nippon Chemi-con caps in our PSUs and the ones without them have cut costs. As a closing thought, power supplies have not changed dramatically in the last 10+ years so you can easily test 5-7 PSUs from the big OEMs at various power levels - Seasonic, CWT, Superflower and have great coverage on what is currently being sold on the market as we all know that the internal guts of PSUs are usually similar in various "Brands" that sell them with minor differences, say a different fan.
@GoldSrc_3 жыл бұрын
Showing the ripple when it begins to show up in the oscilloscope waveform would be a great addition when testing more PSUs in the future. Some people don't know how it looks or why it is bad. Those waveforms you guys showed up don't mean much.
@alexzahabizadeh82583 жыл бұрын
Work in power electronics (specifically power FETs), and will back this as a great review! I am sharing this with our summer interns because it's a great physical example of what our customers want to make! Two points of feedback: - Block diagram during the physical dimensions review of the staging would be nice, but that's probably too much for most people - OCP and OPP are both time dependent. They should trip in some small amount of time (like microsecond range or less). I would be interested in knowing when the fault trips and how long it takes. Since yall were slowly ramping up to the fault detection, I would be interested in a verification by jumping straight to that point or slightly below.
@Pressbutan3 жыл бұрын
I love that you had to tear apart the power supply to find something redeeming lol
@mkl00113 жыл бұрын
So glad you guys are adding PSU's for content. Jonny guru and his website has been out for some time and I don't think we could ask for a more reliable stand-in.