1) I did not connect Power Good signal. Empty pin.A few questions:
1) Did you just use 5V or 5Vsb for the Power Good pin or…?
2) Were the two red 5v wires the only soldering you did?
3) Did you just double/triple wire at certain pins at the adapter connectors as needed? ie. It looks like the two red 5v wires you soldered then went into five wires out of the adapter, correct? And similar done at the 10-pin adapter for the additional ground and 3.3v pins as needed?
2) Yes, the red 5v was the only soldering. I scraped to bare copper to solder one of them. The other I attached where the inductor came through.
3) Yes, I crimped 2x wires for grounds and 3.3v, and one of the 5v. There are 3 wires going into the other 5v. The 12v just one wire per pin.
You could buy a 1 PSU to 2 motherboard adapter and re-pin it to avoid the crimping. But you would have a few wires you might need to cut to thin it out. (12v, PW ON, 5VSB). Another option is a straight 24-pin extension and soldering/shrink wrap a bunch of Y cables.
Now I feel silly because a good use of this supply would be a Lenovo workstation motherboard like the seriously loaded P520C M-ATX (PCIe from CPU: bifurcation x16*2, x8, M.2, M.2; that's 10x M.2 if you used 'HyperM.2' cards). They use a 14-pin with 3x 12v, 5 grounds, 5vsb, 5v, PW_ON (also a blank pin, PWR_OK, and -12v). So I'll need to make another adapter if I do that.
Not sure which part you needed to see . If it's PW_OK I did not wire anything to it.It's just slightly out of view in that picture we need to see the other side. Doesn't look like anything is there from the angle we have, so I'm also curious how it's working.
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