Amazon has
EVGA Supernova 650 GT 650W 80 Plus Gold Modular Power Supply (220-GT-0650-Y1) on sale for
$64.99.
Shipping is free.
Newegg has
EVGA Supernova 650 GT 650W 80 Plus Gold Modular Power Supply (220-GT-0650-Y1) on sale for
$64.99.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
havok86 for finding this deal.
Features:- 80 PLUS Gold certified, with 90% (115VAC) 92% (220VAC~240VAC) efficiency or higher under typical loads
- Fully Modular to reduce clutter and improve airflow
- 100% Japanese Capacitors OVP, UVP, OCP, OPP, SCP, and Dual OTP Protections
- Fluid Dynamic Bearing Fan and EVGA Auto ECO Mode for ultra-quiet operation and increased lifespan
- 7 Year Limited and unparalleled EVGA Customer Support
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Cedric Greene
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It came with 10 years warranty. I think I paid about $80AR at the time.
I do think one serious DIY computer person should have at least one backup PSU in his closet... think about it, even if in warranty, you can't wait until it is fixed!
And with evga's history of sudden shifts in the market I don't know if I'd bank on them being around for the next 7 years. This is cheap enough that doesn't matter imo.
Or if you wanted to use this to charge your battery, this would charge 650 W-h in 1 hour, which I believe is 130,000 mAh (I think it uses 5V).
Even if EVGA won't honor the warranty, use a card like AMEX or Sapphire that will give you an extra year of warranty. If it dies, you can get a refund that way. AMEX is better -- Chase required me to buy a replacement when I used their warranty. AMEX was automatic.
Even if EVGA won't honor the warranty, use a card like AMEX or Sapphire that will give you an extra year of warranty. If it dies, you can get a refund that way. AMEX is better -- Chase required me to buy a replacement when I used their warranty. AMEX was automatic.
https://outervision.com/power-supply-calculator
https://www.coolermaste
For reference I have a system with a 3080, 2 SSDs, 2 SATA HDDs, a blu-ray player, a Ryzen 7 5800 and two sticks of DDR4 RAM, and I'm running with 0 problems on a 650W EVGA power supply. By contrast one of the calculators told me I needed 813W.
The other problem is, some of these cheapo power supplies don't deliver nearly as much power under load as they advertise, so manufacturers often have to recommend a supply rated much higher to compensate so people won't complain. If you get an EVGA or other good-quality one, though, you can get a 650W one like this instead of a "1000W" one by an unknown Chinese company.
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