"Trey Rozsa" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hey guys,
>
> I recently got an Antec TruePower Quattro 1000W PSU.
>
> http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817371012
>
> It was on sale for $120 and I knew it to be a tier 1 PSU. I am
> planning to build an i7 to play at 1920x1200 in a month or so.
> However, I have now been looking further into how it does when paired
> with a higher end GPU. I have been hearing that some people are
> experiencing problems with GPUs like the 4870x2 on this PSU. The 12V
> rails on the PSU only have 18A each. I have read that this is
> considered quite bad for the higher cards. One person said that you
> may be able to get it working by using one 6pin plug from one rail,
> and an 8pin plug from a different rail:
>
> 3rd post in this thread:
> http://forums.amd.com/game/messagevi...&enterthread=y
> That wouldn't add up to more than 36A, though, right? Am I missing
> something here?
> I had read that a 50A on the 12V rail is recommended for the 4870x2.
(snip) Video card manufacturers make a recommendation about how much power
should be available on the +12V rail. However, this is not the power
required for the *video card* alone. For example, I guarantee you that a
4870X2 does not use 600W of power all by itself. That is what it would use
if it really drew 50A off of the +12V rail. (12V X 50A = 600W). But, with
recent power supplies having most of their available power available on the
+12V rail, you can guesstimate what size power supply you will need based on
the video card recommendation for amperage on the +12V rail. If the
recommendation is 50A (600W) and that is "most" of the power supply, then
you are looking at roughly a 800W power supply. So a 1000W power supply
should do nicely.
Still, a high-end GPU could draw about 100W or more. Two of them could draw
200W or more. So you are looking at roughly 17A or more for a 4870X2. So,
18A on each +12V rail is not good for a high-end video card with dual GPUs.
Yeah, someone suggested you might be able to work it by running off of two
rails. Do you really want to take a chance with a kludge like that to run a
high-end video card, though?
I'd suggest you return your power supply and get a BFG ES-800 to replace it.
Note it has 36A on each of 2 +12V rails, and it has four total +12V
ails. -Dave
http://www.hardwarecanucks.com/forum...-review-2.html