I have been thinking a low about saving power recently and built a device similar to "Kill a watt" to measure how much power is being drawn by each item in the house. :clap:
When I used the same on the computer, I got some interesting results. I have a Quad core Intel with a Radeon HD4850 card, 4gb mem, two hard disks, two DVD Writers and a Soundblaster PCI card in the system. On idle, the system draws a total of 125W. On playing Crysis with all settings at high, I get a peak usage of 220W. Even with a full CPU load, I never cross 280W. Granted I have a bronze certified Antec PSU that is very efficient, but even a inefficient PSU will draw another 15% more.
When I tried the same test on another older AthlonXP 1700+ CPU + motherboard + 1 DVD Drive + 1 Hard disk system, I got a usage of 110W with a very old PSU. When I tried this same system with a good PSU, I saved another 10W. And finally when I tried the same system with my Antec Bronze certified PSU, I saved 20W compared to the first PSU.
So the difference between a Bronze certified PSU and ordinary PSU found in every shop in India is a max of 20W. Which means that if I run the machine with a bad PSU for 50 hours, I end up saving 1 unit of power (Rs 5.xx at the peak slabs) :huh:
In other words, with a fairly high end systems, Im drawing less than 300W at any point in time with any PSU. A bronze certified PSU gives me a saving of Rs 5 every 50 hours.
Based on these results, all we need is a 400W PSU that can handles spikes and fluctuations well. Why then the fascination for expensive 480W plus and 600W Bronze certified PSU's that are recommended in every thread in every forum ?
What am I missing here ?
When I used the same on the computer, I got some interesting results. I have a Quad core Intel with a Radeon HD4850 card, 4gb mem, two hard disks, two DVD Writers and a Soundblaster PCI card in the system. On idle, the system draws a total of 125W. On playing Crysis with all settings at high, I get a peak usage of 220W. Even with a full CPU load, I never cross 280W. Granted I have a bronze certified Antec PSU that is very efficient, but even a inefficient PSU will draw another 15% more.
When I tried the same test on another older AthlonXP 1700+ CPU + motherboard + 1 DVD Drive + 1 Hard disk system, I got a usage of 110W with a very old PSU. When I tried this same system with a good PSU, I saved another 10W. And finally when I tried the same system with my Antec Bronze certified PSU, I saved 20W compared to the first PSU.
So the difference between a Bronze certified PSU and ordinary PSU found in every shop in India is a max of 20W. Which means that if I run the machine with a bad PSU for 50 hours, I end up saving 1 unit of power (Rs 5.xx at the peak slabs) :huh:
In other words, with a fairly high end systems, Im drawing less than 300W at any point in time with any PSU. A bronze certified PSU gives me a saving of Rs 5 every 50 hours.
Based on these results, all we need is a 400W PSU that can handles spikes and fluctuations well. Why then the fascination for expensive 480W plus and 600W Bronze certified PSU's that are recommended in every thread in every forum ?
What am I missing here ?