This power supply is one of the three SLi validated PSU's (along with the 510 and 850 from PC Power and Cooling). I have recieved this power supply and I would like to uncover some of the uncertainties.
Firstly, the data Silverstone has supplied.
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http://www.silverstonetek.com/products-65zf.htm
Quad +12V rail for superior performance
Dual PCI-E 6pin connectors (SLI ready)
Four Serial ATA connectors
Industrial class components
Support for ATX 12V 2.0 & EPS 12V
Active PFC
Color Titanium black
Cooling System 1x 80mm ball bearing fan
Noise Level 29 dBA minimum
Weigh 2.7 kg
Dimension 150 mm (W) x 86 mm (H) x 180 mm (D)
MTBF 100,000 hours at 25'C, full load
Operating temperature 0 ~ 50°C
Model Output
+3.3V +5V +12V1 +12V2 +12V3 +12V4 -12V 5Vsb
33A 24A 13A/18A* 18A 16A 8A/13A* 0.5A 2.0A
*Peak
+3.3V & +5V : 170W Max.
+12V1 & +12V2 & +12V3 & +12V4 : 504W(42A) / peak 540W(45A)
Total DC output : 650W Max / 710W Peak.
Protection : Over Current Protection , Under voltage protection , Over Voltage Protection , Short Circuit Protection , No Load Operation
+5V min. load is 10A when +12V output is 30A to 38A
+5V min. load is 15A when +12V output is 38A to 42A
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NOTE: This power supply is 18cm long and may not fit in some cases [Lian Li V1000] but I can confirm this fits in the CM Stacker.
Noise
This power supply, although rated at 29dBA by Silverstone is quite loud - rivalling that of PC Power and Cooling PSU's. It is obvious that this much noise is needed for a 650w PSU cooled ONLY by a single 80mm Fan.
FAN: ADDA [AD0812UB-A70GL] DC 12v 0.30AMP
What Silverstone had to say: "With the amount of power that ST65ZF needs to deliver at 50C, we had to
increase the speed of the fan so not to compromise on reliability. We know
there are manufactures that feature very slow running fan in their high
wattage models, but this is the exact reason they are unable to pass
NVIDIA's SLI certification test. If it is any consolation, the ST65ZF at
high load exhibits slightly less noise than PC Power & Cooling's 510W model
(another PSU on NVIDIA's SLI list)."
However, that does not explain why they did not have 2x8cm fans in push-pull config similar to that of Topowers and OCZ's.
Cable Sleeving
The two PCI-E 6-pin Power connectors, 4/8 pin CPU connector, 24-pin motherboard connector and the 6-pin EPS connector is sleeved. The 4-pin molexes and sata cables are unsleeved.
Target Market
Silverstone Rep stated that this power supply is not going to be as good as the PC Power and Cooling's but at a level just under that. It has passed the SLi validation tests, so it is at least quite good.He also mentioned that it is going to be "affordable" as compared to Zippy or PC Power and Cooling's.
Manufacturer
This power supply is manufactured by Enhance Electronics, a supposed company in the PSU industry with a reputation for "building very reliable power supplies" (Silverstone Rep, 2005). The PSU's +12V rail distribution, exterior casing, and cables are exclusive to SilverStone, however.
Pots
The pots on this power supply are "externally accessible" on the side of the power supply. Through testing, VR3 adjusts the 12v rails as well as the 5v rail. VR1 and VR2 are a mystery to me, however, as soon as I get data from Silverstone, I will let you know.
Rail Distribution
With Quad 12v rails, many would want to know how the rails are distributed.
Both PCI-Express Power connectors are on +12v3 - having 16A available
This Power supply supports EPS12v and thus has a 8-pin power connector [converter included] and +12v1 and +12v2 are attached to this. Thus, 31A available for the CPU Power connector.
SATA connectors = ALSO on +12v2
Molex connectors = +12v4
Motherboard 24-pin 12v = +12v3
Even so, the max output for the 12v rails TOGETHER are 42A. However, over current protection will not kick in until 20Amps are drawn from each 12v rail.
Note: This power supply has "crossloading" issues. e.g.
+5V min. load is 10A when +12V output is 30A to 38A
+5V min. load is 15A when +12V output is 38A to 42A
meaning that a minimum load on 5v is required for high amps on the +12v
Ripple
Area of concern is here.
+3.3V 100 mVp-p
+5V 100 mVp-p
+12V1 150 mVp-p
+12V2 150 mVp-p
+12V3 150 mVp-p
+12V4 150 mVp-p
-12V 150 mVp-p
+5VSB 100 mVp-p
Silverstone provided me with this data. ATXv2.0 calls for a maximum of 120mVp-p ripple on the 12v rail. Whilst the real ripple MAY be lower than the values listed here, it still represents a concern as this data is from Silverstone [the ones marketing this product].
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