External Appearance

The chassis of the SteamPunk 80+ Gold 750W is 160 mm deep, making it a bit longer than ATX-compliant PSUs (140 mm) but still short enough to fill into the vast majority of cases (save perhaps from a few proprietary designs). Note that all designs using a >130 mm fan are longer than 140 mm, otherwise the fan cannot possibly fit inside the unit. Aesthetically, the designer did try to make the SteamPunk PSU appealing, yet not extravagant. It is an all-black design, down to the cables and connectors, with the designer applying a custom web-themed fan grill and painting the series logo on the sides of the chassis. There is no lighting, with 1STPlayer focusing on the safe bet of a subtle appearance.

 

The rear side of the PSU is typical, with just a simple AC cable receptacle and an on/off switch to be found next to the perforated rear side of the PSU. A large sticker with the certifications and basic electrical specifications of the PSU covers most of the top.

 

Modular connectors cover most of the PSU’s front surface. A basic legend and artwork is painted directly onto the chassis, which is both aesthetically better and more durable than the stickers we usually find there. The connectors are keyed, ensuring that it is not possible to insert the wrong cable into the wrong receptacle. 

Internal Design

A standard black 140 mm fan without LEDs is responsible for the cooling needs of the Steampunk 750W PSU. Yate Loon supplies the fan, a very well-known manufacturer whose products are frequently found in PC PSUs. The D14SH-12 fan has a typical sleeve bearing engine and a maximum rotational speed of 2800 RPM, which is extremely high for a 140 mm fan.

The internal design of the Steampunk 750W PSU is not of a platform coming from any of the known OEMs. That is because the business group that includes 1STPlayer owns a development/manufacturing company as well (called Helly Technology), meaning that they essentially design and fabricate their own platforms. That is very interesting to us, as we get to see how a new design gets to perform against the platforms developed by the known giants in the business. The heatsinks are sizable for a PSU of this power output and claimed efficiency, leaving us wondering why the designer installed such a powerful cooling fan.

 

1STPlayer carefully claims that the main capacitor, and that capacitor only, is a top-quality Japanese product. Indeed, the APFC capacitor is a 450V/470μF electrolytic capacitor made by Rubycon, perhaps the most reputable of all consumer-grade capacitor manufacturers on the planet. The rest of the capacitors however, electrolytic and polymer alike, are supplied by ChengX and AsiaX. These are medium quality capacitors and not on par with manufacturers like Rubycon or Nippon Chemi-Con, but they are not of poor quality either. At this point we should note that ChengX is suffering from very poor reputation due to numerous counterfeit products that are circulating on the market.

 

In terms of design, the engineer(s) who made this platform kept everything relatively simple and very clean. The layout is tidy, with good component spacing and a clean assembly job. There are two input bridge rectifiers sandwiches together on their own small heatsink, followed by a typical APFC circuit. The main inversion circuitry is a half-bridge design with an LLC resonant converter, a fairly typical topology for a modern PSU. The secondary side consists of four MOSFETs that generate a single 12V line. DC to DC converters generate the 3.3V and 5V lines from the main 12V line. The secondary PCB that hosts the cable connectors is directly connected to the main PCB, without any wires, minimizing losses and improving the thermal performance of the PSU.

 

Introduction, Packaging & Bundle Cold Test Results
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  • South_DL - Tuesday, May 12, 2020 - link

    Not enough Japanese Caps, design not coming from a well known designer, nor innovative either, so, no thank! Go back with your communist party investment back to mainland China and play games with their money, not ours...
  • PeterCollier - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    What's the hype behind Japanese caps? Were they always good? Because in the 80s and 90s, there was a "ghost" or a Japanese capacitor plague that affected everything, including cars.
  • The_Assimilator - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    Pssst! It's no longer the 80s or 90s. Hasn't been for a few decades, in fact.
  • PeterCollier - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    That's why I asked "were they always [considered] good"? Or are the only people who think they're good the people who were born in the last few years?
  • CrystalCowboy - Thursday, May 14, 2020 - link

    Wikipedia says the "Capacitor plague" lasted roughly 1999-2007. The brands most affected were Taiwanese. A botched formula stolen through industrial espionage was blamed. Following the plague, board and part manufacturers started paying more attention to cap quality.
  • PeterCollier - Monday, May 18, 2020 - link

    This is what I'm talking about:

    https://ednjapan.com/edn/spv/1208/01/news006.html
  • Tomatotech - Tuesday, May 12, 2020 - link

    Please do a review of some picoPSU units! Pick some cheap 200w ones from Amazon or eBay, and test them next to the gold standard, a HDPLEX picoPSU unit!
  • Samus - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    Overall this is a really impressive showing for something built from the ground up, and using Chinese capacitors.

    My concern with those ripple measurements is, over time, component tolerances will deteriorate and ripple will increase. It's already halfway to the bare minimum spec on the 5v rail, possibly implying this thing will only be reliable for a few years. It's almost definitely undersized or lower quality caps causing the ripple, unless the filtering stages are inherently poorly designed.
  • wilsonkf - Wednesday, May 13, 2020 - link

    This brand is well-known for mediocre quality and cutting corners in Mainland China, though priced very aggressively.
  • promocodelive - Monday, June 1, 2020 - link

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