sangram said:
Thanks for that link, techcheat.
I fed in my system specs and it gave me 513 watts.
Must be something wrong with my 4-year old Antec True480 (first version), doesn't seem to have blown up itself or anything connected to it.
[sarcasm]
I used a 25% capacitor aging - can you please explain what that is for uneducated noobs like us? I kind of used the site guide.
[/sarcasm]
A calculator like that, which requires you to pay them 2 dollars for full use, is a money-making gig. Oh yeah, and surrounded by PSU ads. Nice.
In truth, there's a lot of useful information on the web available free of charge, and I will be happy to provide you with links where you can read extensive tomes of information on power supply construction and usage, as well as real current draw, plus duty cycling, efficiency, load and thermal cycling and other such.
Let me know if you're interested.
In the meantime - real power draw and estimated power draw are two different issues completely, and thermal effects on capacitors may be worse or better depending on brand and spec of the capacitors. I can write more, but won't out of respect for your time.
Dude dont be rude... the thing is that one of the forums respected member has made some factually incorrect statements and now everyone is trying to come in here and chip in for him. The fact of the matter is blanket statements like a 500 watt power supply is good enough for 8800 GTS dont mean jack. They do nothing but mislead people who are here to learn!!!
I want to highlight series of incorrect statements made here, and I personally have nothing against anyone. Its just a forum, we all share, we all learn, but the day one feels that he knows it all and becomes arrogant, its dooms day.
Our esteemed member qouted that his speakers draw power from his PSU :rofl: and than you laugh at me for recommending a PSU calculator. I 100% realize that calculators are over-engineered as they have to factor in the worst possible scenario and overstate by 10-20%. I have mentioned that previously as well.
Secondly blanket statements like a 500 watt PSU can power a high end configuration doesnt carry any merit. 500 watt PSUs range from $30 to $200, and wattage doesnt mean jack. Its the amperage at +12V which is the deciding factor when you choose a PSU. You will find PSUs with 500 watt rating delivering anywhere between 16A@12V to 20A@12V. So educating the members about amperage etc. would be more useful. I havent even gone into other factors like PSUs with multiple 12V rails, rail dependencies, efficiency, industry grade capacitors that operate at high temperature, thermal efficiency etc.
Some side effects of a stressed PSU result in damaged memory, BSOD, heated PSU that is loud caz of an overworking fan, fuse, sparks, possibly damaged components.
People claim here that they have their rig running fine for years on a 500 watt supply, so I must be a moron... lol... let me try to draw an analogy:
A guy tries to educate ppl about how useful ABS is, in a country like India 2 years ago. Now since ppl dont know what ABS really is, this guy explains this would make your car brake better at high speeds. And than everyone jumps in and says, ABS WTF!!! We can brake our cars at high speeds. We have been braking our cars for years...

:rofl:
Of course every buddy beats the crap out of the guy. In 95% of cases you probably would not need ABS anyways, but that 5% can be life saving. Similarly 90% of Indians run on memories without heatsinks and PCs work fine for years, but why do high end manfacturers provide heatsinks?
Lastly just caz your PSU hasnt died doesnt mean that its working optimally. I personally would not risk a 8800 GTX/S on a 500 watt PSU from a lesser known brand. Good idea would be to get Antec True Power PSU or CM iGreen... Of ocurse 95% of the time you'd be ok on a regular PSU, but I WONT risk a 20k hardware on an underpowered PSU. Having a good PSU is like having a reliable car that wont break down on you in the middle of nowhere.