SilverStone showcases 1,500W PSU with 85 per cent efficiency

by Tarinder Sandhu on 2 June 2009, 17:10

Tags: SilverstoneTek

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qasir

Add to My Vault: x

We came across a rather hefty PSU when dropping in to see SilverStone at this year's COMPUTEX trade show.



The Strider ST1500 ships with a 1,500W rating, as the name implies, rising to 1,600W under peak conditions - the highest we've seen for an in-the-case supply. Busting out the tape measure, the big-daddy SilverStone measures 220mm x 150mm x 86mm (WxHxD) so most large chassis should be able to accept it.

Completely modular in design, the package has, cable-wise, four eight-pin PCIe, eight six-pin PCIe, and 12 SATA connectors, along with a bunch of Molexes and main 24-pin and eight-pin plugs.

The enormous wattage is put to good use, providing eight 12V rails (25A limit each) with a combined 110A, and we were a little surprised to learn that the ST1500 had passed the 80PLUS Silver certification with 85-88 per cent efficiency over a wide-ranging load, although it's yet to appear in the records.

SilverStone reckons the single 135mm fan is good enough to keep the beast cool, operating at between 19-34dBA, but we wonder just what kind of rig would require up to 1.5kW.

Got the moolah? It should etail for around $450.


HEXUS Forums :: 11 Comments

Login with Forum Account

Don't have an account? Register today!
How is efficiency worked out?

Is it n% efficient at m% of full load? Is it averaged over a range of loads?

Indeed, is efficiency vs. load a linear relationship, or some other function?
It's a minimum efficiency over a range of loads. At any particular load the efficiency can be higher.
Honestly… who's *ever* going to use 1.5kW? That's just ludicrous.
i am confused as to how 85% efficency is a selling point in any other electrical product that would be awful surely.
danroyle
i am confused as to how 85% efficency is a selling point in any other electrical product that would be awful surely.

In terms of high wattage power transformers, 85%+ in home appliances is quite good :)

Some incandescent light bulbs make for scary reading :eek:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incandescent_light_bulb#Efficiency_comparisons