After our last review, we got dozens of emails begging for PCP&C power supplies.  Thankfully, our good friends at Directron.com were able to help us obtain a sample.  Unfortunately, our initial looks at the unit were slightly mixed.

Our largest amazement was that the TurboCool 475 unit had no power switch.  Out of almost 20 represented power supplies, this was the only unit that did not have a simple on/off switch.  The TurboCool 475 was also the loudest power supply we had ever heard, definitely louder than the TTGI or Vantec units on full fan speed.

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On the other hand, the TurboCool 475 does have a few things going for it.  For one, TurboCool is one of the only units we have seen that contains onboard line purification.  This definitely will help our signal and generate great results in our ripple test. To justify the loud fan speed, the TurboCool 475 also stays extremely cool during operation, even under load.

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Albeit subtle, the TurboCool 475 has variable voltage settings inside the unit. The Antec TrueControl puts them on the fan control in the front of the case, which makes it a little more user friendly. PC Power & Cooling makes you void the warranty to get at the variable voltage controls, so its definitely something that is not recommended unless you know exactly what you are doing.

Wattages

 

3.3V

5V

12V

-12

-5

+5vsb

combined theoretical

actual combined

advertised  total

PC Power & Cooling TurboCool 475

148.50

200.00

216.00

24.00

1.50

14.00

348.50

300.00

480.00

The TurboCool has an extremely high +3.3V rail.  This power supply is geared for the AMD system builder, without a doubt.  As a result, the combined +3.3V/+5.0V rail is also quite remarkable; higher than any other power supply we tested. If this is not to your taste you can adjust the voltages on the inside of the unit, although we recommend not voiding the warranty unless you absolutely have no other choice. Remember, playing with the adjustable voltage settings can really mess up your computer. The unit does not come with any ATX sheathing, so you may want to invest in twist ties or some other form of cable management

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When we first obtained this sample, it was priced around $180.  We never really could figure out why it was priced so high, but over the last couple months the price dropped a little to $165.  Even though the TurboCool definitely lacks features, it is the best performer in our benchmark suite.  If you are an AMD builder (or overclocker) and you do not mind the loud fan (and high price), this is the power supply for you.

Kingwin Divine Power KWI-450WABK Fortron FSP400-60PFN
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  • Anonymous User - Tuesday, August 5, 2003 - link

    I personally thought the Antec True Power 330 was shining a little bit in this review. With 31.0 - 34.5 dBa noise, 26.5 - 33.8 C temp, on the lower end of memory errors, and a little tighter voltages than the average, it seems like it gives you the best combination of all categories. The only thing we're missing is some of the wattage testing. What do you guys think? And what about some of the other True Power product line - perhaps the 430 since 330 is at the lower end of PSU size that I would like to get for the power usage of any new computer (the True Control 550 is in a different product line than the True Power).
  • Anonymous User - Tuesday, August 5, 2003 - link

    Seasonic Super Silencer 400 would be interesting to test later - see if their claims of efficient, cool and quiet are accurate.
  • abr27440 - Tuesday, August 5, 2003 - link

    does it strike anyone else as odd that their memory if flopping bits left and right on their test? Dont know about you but i would prefer NO bit flips. :)
  • Anonymous User - Tuesday, August 5, 2003 - link

    A few clicks of my calculator indicate that only the Zalman ZM400A-APS and Fortron FSP400-60PFN did significantly better than average on the Interference Test, and only the TTGI/Superflower 420SS and TTGI/Superflower 520SS 4Fan did significantly worse.

    What were the results when different memory modules were tried, preferrably other makes of modules with other makes of chips? I'd like to know because the error rates indicated are roughly 10,000 to 1,000,000 times what memory manufacturers claim in actual systems.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, August 4, 2003 - link

    I'm a bit confused over what it takes to be a good power supply? You slammed the Antec TruePower 330 for its "modest" +12 volt rail (204 watts). Yet you give the Frotron FSP400 your editors award and it only pumps 180 watts on the +12 volt rail. I would think this is a very important part of the formula for your pick since so many systems by your readers have high demands on the +12 volt rail due to the popularity of high end video cards. Comments?
  • Anonymous User - Monday, August 4, 2003 - link

    Another agreement with #15 and #18. If you want quiet, go for the silencer series. They are the same PS with different cooling.

    I discovered this when I found out what an outstanding company they are. My first PCP&C supply was a silencer 235, which is still running perfectly after 8 years. However, it wasn't enough juice for a P4 system. I wanted a new silencer with more power, but I balked at the price of the 400. I bought the turbocool 350 and boy was it loud! I called PCP&C and told them of my dilemna: what I really wanted was a silencer 350, which they didn't offer. NO PROBLEM! They put together a custom, full-warranty 350 silencer for me for $10 extra and shipped it right out.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, August 4, 2003 - link

    The page on the TruePower 330 says the power on the +12V rail is 'extremely modest'. Did you mean to say the "+5V rail", rather than the "+12V rail"?
  • KF - Monday, August 4, 2003 - link

    The startling part of this review is that every power supply produced memory errors within six hours. It would seem every PC is unrealible and therefore worthless, regardless of the power supply. The cause could just as easily have been junk (noise, spikes, drop-outs, oscillations) on the power supply leads as electromagnetic interference. Or maybe it was a problem with the motherboard.

    Another interesting fact is that all the power supplies preformed insignificantly different under the loads used. Good news for people using cheap power supplies.

    It would be interesting to know what the loads on the different voltage supplies are for real PCs by actual measurement. Not guess, not calculation from the labels. Monitor the currents while you do some of those stressful mobo benchmarks. How much on 12V, 5V, 3.3V? Without numbers, it is impossible to gauge what realistic power supply specs should be.
  • Anonymous User - Monday, August 4, 2003 - link

    Erm, don't know of any mobo using the +3.3 as source rail for an AMD cpu; perhaps you might look at the +5.0 as a candidate.

    What 'theory' is behind that "theoretical combined" value? Meaningless, except to show a lack of understanding of how a 'standard' PSU is constructed (the only PSU where this would be comprehensible are the non-standard design Truepowers, where, of course, the value was ommitted).

    A multimeter (or mobo sensor) gives only vague 'averages' of the madly fluctuating voltages that occur as millions of transistors switch on and off on each clock cycle; these broad values are only useful as an indicator of capacity/quality by the amount of sag between idle and load. You need a trapping 'scope' to nail the maximum variations to see the quality of the regulation (also to actually measure ripple).

    Generally speaking, about 20W are consumed by the control (-) voltages, so that the total actual capacity of the three power rails is less than the claimed power. I have never seen a manufacturer claim a wattage not rounded to 5W, and just as the individual +3.3 and +5 wattages can 'sum' to a value greater than the TCO, so can the TCO and +12 wattages 'sum' to a number greater than the combined +3.3 +5 and +12 total wattage capacity. All of this leads to the impression that some table values (+12 in particular) were 'calculated' under some 'theory', and not the manufacturers' specs.


  • Anonymous User - Monday, August 4, 2003 - link

    /RANT ON HOW THE MODS MODERATE...

    IF you mods want to play the PC card, they play it fairly or don't play it at all.

    Why is a thread locked, when a person mentions a "blackie is aggressive, or these "africa americans are always aggressive".

    Yet when another individual makes a similar thread, but this time ranting on "hispanics are all crazy etc etc" it doesn't get locked on.

    Or this one is my favorite, i just saw a thread where someone mentioned his "retarded neighbour" lit fire to a paper roll or something. Now i thought calling someone retarded is not Political correct.

    Like i said if you mods want to play the Political correctness game, then play it fairly or stop choosing at your will which threads offend you personally.

    I assume this message won't get thru, because its sent from an anonymous. oh well.

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