Đánh giá andyson h6 series 600 năm 2024
PSU Tier List rev. 16.1 Show Last Update: 03-10-2020 Legend : Green - small form-factor (gold and blue colors are disregarded due to scarcity of SFX PSUs) Gold - best units in the tier (includes requirements for blue color in tier A) Blue - quiet operation under moderate load (see details in the spreadsheet) Hyphen / Dash - Series / lineups separator Slash - Models (inside one series) separator Parenthesis / Round brackets - Model variations (which belong to the same position) Square brackets - Additional description (wattage range, part of SKU code, label / casing color, release year) Numbers in red colored square brackets - footnotes, see descritptions at the end of respective tiers Low priority subtiers - Lack of info (no reviews) or minor issues (see the corresponding tab in the spreadsheet). Not recommended for purchase over any normal priority units. Multi-rail units - Not necessarily better than single-rail units but provide an extra layer of protection by having 12V OCP set lower than total capacity, which is especially relevant for very high capacity units (=>1kW). Pay attention to rails configuration when using with high power draw components to avoid shutdowns. See spreadsheet for changelog, methodology, detailed description of colors, review sources, notes on grayed-out units including issues like GPU incompatibility or quality and performance issues, and other additional info. – Tier A • High-end( multi/single-rail switchable )
( multi-rail )
( single-rail )
( low priority units )
( speculative position )
[1] Units experiencing tripping issues with high transient power draw GPUs like AMD Vega, 6900 XT and Nvidia RTX3080/3090. Generally fixed in newer batches. [2] Corsair SF units with LOT codes from 194448* through 201148* have potential problems, Corsair conducts a voluntary replacement, source. [3] Lower than 18AWG wires in pig-tail end of PCIe/EPS cables for 12V leads, don’t use for constant high-load applications or only use the first connector. [4] Antec EA Pro Gold has versions for Chinese market made by FSP on completely different, worse, group-regulated platform (tier E). Source 1,2.[5] Issues around high OTP, not shutting down at 200c (heatgun), but working afterwards [6] Leadex V series has 20AWG wires in pig-tail cables and lower than 105% OPP, making it potentially susceptible to tripping with high-end, high transient power draw GPUs. [7] Older Seasonic Focus revisions (Focus Gold, Focus Plus Gold / Platinum, made before 2018) had transient sensitivity issues. Some more recent models are not affected because they were released after the fix (Seasonic Focus GM/GX/PX refreshes, Phanteks AMP, NZXT C/E etc.). Although situation with Ampere GPUs is unclear it’s assumed that there are no widespread issues on Focus platform. [8] Seasonic PRIME based units experience shutdowns with RTX3080/3090 (and possibly RX6900 XT) GPUs. The cause is not the OCP tripping but a PSU design flaw as evident by the PSU not latching off on shutdown and 1000W+ models being affected too. Doesn’t manifest in 100% cases as it’s also dependent on motherboard model and GPU OC. Seasonic provides a new 24-pin cable to fix this via support. [9] There are regional (China and Australia) versions of AX1600i with C14 socket instead of C20 and with no mention of sub 200V input voltage operation. They’re still identical to worldwide versions otherwise and such can be used under full 100-240V input voltage range but maximum operating wattage under low input mains voltage is limited by the lower current and temperature rating of C14 socket, it’s not recommended to use such units at higher than 1.3kW capacity in 120V mains or lower due to risk of melting the socket. [10] Out of production, any listings you would encounter today would be either used, refurbished or at the very least being long in storage. Buy at your discretion. [11] Ball bearing fan, possibly not silent even at very low RPMs. [12] PCIe and EPS modular sockets aren’t electrically compatible despite they are mechanically, pay attention, misconnecting might result in the damage to PC. [13] Be aware that strictly multi-rail units (without a possibility to switch to single-rail mode) can trip with very high power draw GPUs (RTX3080/RX6800XT and higher) and/or CPUs (unlocked Intel i7/i9 or AMD Threadripper) due to lower OCP tripping point when the load on rails is unbalanced. Read the manual and balance out the load if that happens. – Tier B • Mid-range
( low priority units )
( speculative position )
[1] Units experiencing tripping issues with high transient power draw GPUs like AMD Vega, 6900 XT and NVidia RTX3080 / 3080 Ti / 3090. Generally fixed in newer batches. [2] OEM oriented unit under a similar name, was accidentally sent out by Amazon to some consumers. Made by Highpower instead of CWT. [3] Units that don’t reach full rated capacity under full rated input voltage range. [4] Out of production, any listings you would encounter today would either be used, refurbished or at the very least being long in storage. Buy at your discretion. [5] High wattage (=>750W) CWT GPX based units have problems with failing burn-in test under sub 100VAC input, treat as 230V only (JonnyGURU). – Tier C • Low-end
( low priority units )
( speculative position )
[2] High wattage (=>750W) CWT GPX based units have problems with failing burn-in test under sub 100VAC input, treat as 230V only (JonnyGURU). [4] Two versions of Segotep GP-G exist, older v1 version is non-LLC resonant and they’re very hard to extinguish externally, hence model tiering based on v1. [5] Units with 230V only input voltage range [6] Out of production, any listings you would encounter today would either be used, refurbished or at the very least being long in storage. Buy at your discretion. [7] Early models\wattages of Gigabyte P-GM had massive QC issues, see footnote for tier F entry. 1000W SKU is more recent and assumed to be fixed from the start, although there are no reviews to confirm that so buy at your discretion. – Tier D • Only for iGPU builds
( low priority units )
– Tier E • Avoid
[1] Seasonic S12II Bronze and related units have or had UVP issues, [2] Seasonic S12III, S12II EVO and A12 – OCP (on any rails) not claimed, nor present in supervisor IC. No reviews with protection tests to prove otherwise. [3] Antec EA Pro Gold has versions for Chinese market made by FSP on completely different, worse, group-regulated platform (tier E). Source 1,2.[4] Issues around a non-functional OTP and OCP reported by Poiu @ TweakPC – Tier F • Replace immediately
[1] Very high DOA rate and underrated FETs that explode under high stress. Sources : 1,2,3,4. There’s a claimed fix, and some units made after early 2021 seem to be good but it’s not clear to which extent the issue was fixed and past what manufacturing date non-fixed revision wouldn’t be encountered anymore.[2] Downgraded 230V-only version of S12III platform. [3] OCP either not present on any rails or faulty/unreliable. No reviews with protection tests to prove otherwise. [4] Sources : EVGA W1, N1 [5] Source : Armageddon Voltron, other offerings are assumed to perform on the same level until proven otherwise [6] Review sample manipulation / post review design downgrades / frequent component changes without significant differences in branding / paid reviews This work by Luke Savenije et al. is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. |