Tagan ITZ 1300W


Tagan is not a newcomer in the market even, though it might be a new name for some. Tagan has existed for quite a few years, and they started life in Germany with roots tracing to a company called Maxpoint. The story of Maxpoint is indeed a wild one. Maxpoint started as a branch office from Enermax in Hamburg. After several turbulent disagreements, one of the shareholders bought Enermax out and started Maxpoint as a separate company. In the beginning they functioned as a distributor for PC parts, still including Enermax power supplies.

The competition in the market was growing steadily since there was another former colleague from Maxpoint who started another brand called "Be quiet!" A better name was needed, and thus Tagan came into being. Tagan has experienced ups and downs, but today after ~7 years of existence we can still see that Tagan is producing with renowned Topower. Topower had its brightest years several years back and unfortunately lost a lot of customers due to several problems in terms of quality and production. In our list of reviewed power supplies, we have only seen Tagan still sourcing from Topower.


Last year Tagan USA was established to get into the US market. With the ITZ series Tagan is introducing a very new approach to power supplies since it's the first time the company is using another color than black. With ITZ Tagan is actually coming back to its rightful place in the high-end business since there have been several complications with former product lines in other markets. Tagan USA sent us the 1300W version to show what they're capable of achieving. For the USA Tagan teamed up with the company ABS (parent company of Newegg) and you will find the ABS logo on almost every corner of the PSU. The label states 20A for each of the six 12V rails with a combined power of 92A - again, that's quite a load to come up with!

The unit comes wrapped up in a bubble bag with all the necessary accessories. There are cable ties, a Molex to floppy adapter, screws, and the power cord attached in the box. As already mentioned this power supply comes in a shiny blue color mirror finish. Not pictured are the front and sides; the front of the unit has an 80mm fan (with ABS logo in the center) and the side has the label and above it there are many small holes punched in the metal. We will come back to their function a little later. The rear also has an 80mm fan installed - along with the power socket and a huge power switch - which functions in a push-pull configuration. Since we got a Topower handpicked sample we still have the Topower sample number on the case and red dots for measuring the fan speed.

Everything about the Cables



The power supply definitely has the largest amount of cables we have seen so far. Not only do we have four 6-pin PEG connectors but we also get two additional 8-pin PEG connectors on separate cable harnesses. That's fewer PEG connections than the Cooler Master, but Tagan compensates in other ways. The PEG connections are accompanied by twelve SATA connectors on three harnesses and seven Molex connectors on three harnesses. We actually ran out of space on our cable graphic and had to make the best out of it. All cables are sleeved and the PEG cable harnesses are even sleeved with an aluminum mesh with rubber hose. In the end of each PEG cable is a ferrite coil to minimize ripple on the rails.



Once we had this very long power supply open we recognized the inside immediately. We have seen this design already one year ago in the first revision of Topower which didn't perform well at all. We can only hope that this one is a much higher revision and that all the problems from a year ago have been solved. Just to be safe, though, we'll keep a fire extinguisher handy during testing....

Forgetting for a moment our previous bad experience, the inside is very packed since we have one component after another and two huge flower-shaped heat sinks in the middle of it. There is nothing easily visible on the PCB and we could hardly make out the manufacturers of the components. The fans are located directly beside the heat sinks. This might look bad for some at first sight but the heat sinks have actually a round opening going horizontal through it so the air is guided easily through the power supply. Note also that the fan which is pulling the out of the PSU is stronger than the one pushing in. This means that there is more air pulled out than pushed in. Now the openings on the sides come into play because the air which is pulled out can also enter through the side openings. In theory, this helps to provide more fresh air to components besides the ones near the intake fan. On the secondary we had no chance to pull any cable beside to have a look at the components behind it. Everything is tight here and can't even be budged a millimeter without risking damage to the PSU internals.
CM 1250W Performance Characteristics Tagan ITZ 1300W Loads
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  • redly1 - Monday, October 22, 2007 - link

    I'm just trying to imagine the flames that ensue when something goes bad on the motherboard.

    Anyone ever burn up a classic Athlon by forgetting to put the heatsink on? Imagine doing that with a 1.3kW supply? Yikes
  • billa16 - Tuesday, October 23, 2007 - link

    I did that on a k7@950. I was trying to oc it(hardmod with a pencil). Nothing happend the first 2 times(just a few secs). After that it's stopped working. No sparks/flames and stuff like that. Don't belive anything U read/see on the internet.
    This type of power supply's have protections. If something is damaged so bad that would cause flames the protection kicks in. The worst fire scenario with this type of PSU will be a flash when the fuse burns out.
    Sorry for my poor english.
  • DigitalFreak - Monday, October 22, 2007 - link

    Still amazes me how many people fall for the marketing hype...
  • Traciatim - Monday, October 22, 2007 - link

    Instead of just giving specs and doing an overview of the efficiency, why not design a machine that actually needs these over say a 600-700Watt PSU and show watt you would need to do do actually use one of these.

    I have a pretty small machine, and it regularly pulls 120Watts out of the wall, 200Watts if I Get everything ramped up. I'm also using a P4, not a Core2Duo so it's not going to be as efficient.

    The ONLY point that I can see to have one of these is simply to waste money on uneeded equipment that could be better spent one something performance based and to say that 'My PSU is bigger than your PSU'.
  • retrospooty - Monday, October 22, 2007 - link

    Ya, these 1000+ watt PSU's are marketed to enthusiests, and are supposed to be for heavily overclocked quad core CPU's (meaning cascade, dry ICE or liquid nitrogen cooling kind of overclocks) with overclocked high end SLI or crossfire rigs, and plenty of hard drives and other peripherals added as well. We are talking $3000 or higher systems - WAY overkill probably even for that purpose.
  • JarredWalton - Monday, October 22, 2007 - link

    You can see the most power-hungry system I've personally tested http://www.anandtech.com/systems/showdoc.aspx?i=30...">right here - which uses standard ATX components and a Topower PSU. That's a lot more system than most people run, obviously, but if maximum efficiency is achieved in the 40-80% load range, and if that particular PSU was around 80% efficient, it was outputting around 600W of power at maximum load.

    Toss in TriFire HD 2900 XT and you could add another 100W to that, maybe. If you were to get an overclocked Xeon platform with dual quad-core CPUs plus CrossFire/TriFire, you could actually reach the point where 1300W was "required". LOL

    ORB chasers and "professional benchmarkers" running at insane overclocks (i.e. 5000 MHz quad-core) deal with exponential power requirement increases as well. The solution is either to use multiple PSUs or else get one of these uber-powerful designs. So these appear to be for around 0.01% of the market, I guess?
  • Michael91ah - Monday, October 22, 2007 - link

    Glad to see the statistics for these 3 units. I really like the Cooler Master's curve on the acoustics. That noise makes a big difference for me when choosing a power supply.

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