Enermax Revolution D.F. X 1050 Watt PSU - ATX 3.0 PSU review

PSU - Power Supply Units 110 Page 6 of 8 Published by

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Load Testing The PSU

Testing a power supply is challenging; professional load testers must correctly check the PSU’s behavior. 

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The first basic test is performed with a simple power supply tester. It doesn’t load the PSU with more than a couple of Watts but helps determine if the power supply unit is operational. There’s a self-check indicating if the voltages are at the proper levels. As you can see, there have been no issues with the Enermax Revolution D.F. X 1050 W (ATX 3.0) unit.


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One of the sides is lit up by the ARGB, which you can control via the button placed at the back of the unit or using the motherboard utility. 

The following setup was used for the remainder of the testing:

  • Voltcraft VC-870 Digital Multimeter - voltage measurement (+ Fluke 97 scope meter)
  • Oscilloscope - GW INSTEK GDS 3154
  • DC load - original solution
  • Fluke 97 Scope meter (a measurement of voltage and ripple),
  • Voltcraft SL-451 decibel meter (volume measurement)
  • ACUVIM-IIRF – for measuring active power (input from the socket).
  • PCE Instruments PCE-DT 50 tachometer – for the measurement of the rotational speed of the fan.

Measurements are taken only using 230 V input voltage.

Efficiency

Our power supply reviews emulate real-world usage by creating loads that a power-hungry, multi-GPU setup with a powerful CPU would generate. Older components used to require more power, but there has been some press. In a typical configuration, reaching over 500-600 Watts of power draw is difficult. Checking efficiency is a relatively easy thing to accomplish. Let’s take a look at Enermax's efficiency first.

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t does look great even at low loads (e.g., 10%, equaling 105 W), which is quite typical of the idle state in modern PCs. 

Maximum load

Next is the maximum wattage this unit can hold before switching off.

Maximum Load

Efficiency (in %)

1194 W

88.15%

Efficiency looks excellent, even above 100% load. 1194 Watts is a great value, but you wouldn’t want to come close to that for very long. 

ErP Lot 6 Power Off wattage

We looked at the powered-off status (ErP/EuP), productivity mode (when we stress the CPU), and gaming. The lower the wattage, the more efficient the PSU. It is that simple.  

ErP Lot 6 Power Off

value in Watts

1050 W

0.07

 This is well below the 0.5 W requirement.

Ripple testing

First up is the ATX12V V2.2 specification for DC output ripple:  

ATX12V Ver 2.2 Noise/Ripple Tolerance

Output

Ripple (mV p-p)

+3.3 V

50

+5 V

50

+12 V

120

The PSU achieved the following results:

AC Ripple (mV p-p)+3.3 V+5 V+12 V
105 W (10%)1466
262.5 W (25%)1278
525 W (50%)15612
787.5 W (75%)16814
1050 W (100%)181216

The values are very well within tolerance. Even in the worst-case scenario (100% load), it is not even a quarter of the allowed number, so this is not worrying.

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