Power Supply SilverStone SX700-LPT vs Corsair SF450 in terms of noise

jeshikat

Jessica. Wayward SFF.n Founder
Silver Supporter
Feb 22, 2015
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The SX700-LPT does not turn on the fan on at all when below 150W load. This can cause situations where a build is drawing 140W in a case with poor PSU ventilation for a long period and cause the overtemp protection to kick in before the fan has a chance to cool the unit.

SilverStone is going to release a new revision that addresses the issue but I don't know when that will come out.
 
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EdZ

Virtual Realist
May 11, 2015
1,578
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The A4 has the exhaust facing directly up, with the inlet right next to an open side panel. that should be sufficient passive ventilation unless you are continually pegging the PSU at just below the fan cut-in load. Though if you do not need the PSU now, there's no reason not to wait for the revision.
 
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dragonerosso

Trash Compacter
Jan 10, 2016
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I
The A4 has the exhaust facing directly up, with the inlet right next to an open side panel. that should be sufficient passive ventilation unless you are continually pegging the PSU at just below the fan cut-in load. Though if you do not need the PSU now, there's no reason not to wait for the revision.
M really cofused between these 2 psu...i want a unit that in dan a4 will be silent (fan off) at low in idle and silent or with less possibile noise during gaming sessions...no benchmarks no toture tests i'm interested in...
 

jeshikat

Jessica. Wayward SFF.n Founder
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Feb 22, 2015
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With a non-reference video card it could be a problem since it'll heat up the backside of the power supply.

With a reference/blower card then it should be ok.
 
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dragonerosso

Trash Compacter
Jan 10, 2016
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i've just bought on amazon a corsair sf450 on amazon. for its smaller dimensions and i hope that it will be a quieter unit at low loads with a 1070 or 1080 reference card. i will post you impressions when it will arrive :):)
 

cijanzen

Cable Smoosher
Sep 25, 2016
12
11
Not to detract from OP but I'm wondering if I can jump on this thread with a question. I'm trying to decide whether the SF450 or the SF600 is the better way to go considering noise and a bit of future-proofing. I'm looking for quiet operation and will probably purchase a 6600K and MSI 1060 Gaming X 6GB GPU using an RVZ-02 case. In the future (~3 years) I'd imagine upgrading the GPU and then perhaps getting something a little higher performing.

SO, my thinking is the 600W would be better long term but that my current parts would be just fine with 450W. My research leads me to believe the 600W might ramp up more aggressively fan wise than the 450W but that the 600W won't turn on fan until it hits a higher load/temps.

TL/DR
Is the 450W sufficient for long term use with room for upgrade or should I bite the bullet and hope for a quiet 600W?

Here's the build I'm thinking of:

PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant

CPU: Intel Core i5-6600K 3.5GHz Quad-Core Processor ($304.75 @ Vuugo)
CPU Cooler: Scythe BIG Shuriken 2 Rev. B 45.5 CFM Sleeve Bearing CPU Cooler ($69.05)
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-Z170N-Gaming 5 Mini ITX LGA1151 Motherboard ($193.75 @ Vuugo)
Memory: G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-2400 Memory ($89.99 @ Newegg Canada)
Storage: Samsung 850 EVO 500GB M.2-2280 Solid State Drive ($213.46 @ DirectCanada)
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 1060 6GB GAMING X Video Card ($399.98 @ DirectCanada)
Case: Silverstone RVZ02B HTPC Case ($87.55 @ DirectCanada)
Power Supply: Corsair SF 600W 80+ Gold Certified Fully-Modular SFX Power Supply ($138.62 @ DirectCanada)
Optical Drive: LG GS40N DVD/CD Writer ($44.99 @ Memory Express)
Other: StarTech 6-Inch Slimline SATA to SATA Female/Male Adapter with Power ($9.00)
Total: $1551.14
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2016-09-25 15:53 EDT-0400
 

Phuncz

Lord of the Boards
SFFn Staff
May 9, 2015
5,827
4,902
Hi and welcome !

It's hard to say, it will depend mostly on the graphics card manufacturers if they plan on stretching the current 14/16nm out for a few more years or plan on moving to smaller transistors and how those efficient those transistors will be. After the last five years we've discovered that AMD and Nvidia aren't shy of making high-end >250W GPUs, but this generation was much more conservative.

Considering a build with a GTX 1060 and a non-overclocked i5-6600K should remain in between 200 and 250W in most games or tasks, so you're still pretty safe with a 450W. A GTX 1070 should increase the load about 40W if I remember correctly, so consider the reviews with those loads in mind. I believe the Corsair SFX 450W was said to be quieter at lower loads, while the 600W was quieter at higher loads, or noisier vice-versa.
 
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