I have just bought a new ultra-quiet 400W PSU (Power Supply Unit) from quietpc.com for my PC.
Being a lazy useless waste of life and space I haven’t investigated whether there are any issues about replacing the PSU. I just bought the thing on a whim.
My question is - will it run everything fine? I ask because I have a vague recollection of powerful bits (like my geforce 3) needing a certain voltage from the PSU.
Also, is there anything important I need to know before I swap the PSUs?
thanks.
the new p/s has the same type connectors the old one does (no unaccounted-for wires on the old one, not present on the new one (it’s not a Dell, right?))
you SHOULD be good to go - the modern motherboards are equipped with voltage regulators (unless they’re not, in which case, you will fry the PC).
400 will run damn near anything you want, unless you’re all SCSI, and have 2 or more CPUs and, say, more than seven drives in your system. (And even then, it will probably work fine.)
One caveat, though. I believe I read something in PC Mag or here on the boards saying that some (older?) Dell and Gateway PCs didn’t take kindly to new PSUs. You may want to check the user’s manual if you have one of these brands of PC.
I don’t know what the term is for such a thing, but my PC is like trigger’s broom [on Only Fools and Horses] - none of it’s parts are original, it is all built bit-by-bit by me over the years. Ironically the newest parts are the cpu, case and motherboard. the case is an unbranded dark grey thing. the motherboard is an atx one with an amd athlon 1000Mhz on it
thanks all! the PSU is going in like a flash (and I hope I don’t see any flashes)
Not relevant to the original post, but I post this as a public service announcement…all Dell desktop PC’s built since 1998 have a nasty surprise built into them.
The power supply looks like a standard ATX, and the connectors are physically compatible, but they’ve swapped (if I remember correctly) the 12 and 5 volt lines.
Result - replacing the P/S in such a machine with a standard P/S will fry the motherboard, and replacing the motherboard and leaving the P/S will fry the new motherboard. If the original poster’s machine had been such a Dell machine, swapping in his new P/S would have produced a puff of the magic blue smoke without which computers cannot work.
As I say, not relevant in this case, but important that people are aware of this.