Corsair TX vs. OCZ ZT 550W
by Martin Kaffei on March 26, 2012 9:30 AM EST- Posted in
- Cases/Cooling/PSUs
- Corsair
- PSUs
- OCZ
- 550W
- 80Plus Bronze
- ZT
- TX
OCZ ZT550W Overview
The OCZ ZT550W comes with the usual assortment of parts: you get an extensive user manual, a US/UK/Europe power cord (depending on your location), and the necessary mounting screws. In addition, the power supply has cable management, so some modular cables with a common sleeving are placed in the package as well.
Rated at up to 540W, the +12V rail can deliver nearly the full power of the PSU. +3.3V and +5V are rated at a maximum capacity of 24A each, with a combined output of 140W. Compared with most modern high-efficiency power supplies (like Corsair), OCZ has no DC-to-DC converters inside. In fact they use mag amp regulators for the smaller outputs which is a suitable solution too.
The whole housing is coated with a black finish. The fan grille with a OCZ logo in the middle is black too, and both sides of the case have an OCZ logo. As usual the ventilation holes are honeycombed and a large power switch is located next to the AC input. On the front are modular cable connectors, color coded for PCIe (grey) and peripherals (black). The depth of the device is 17,5cm, which is quite much for a 550W power supply.
Cables and Connectors | ||
Connector type (length) |
Main | 1x 24-pin (55cm) modular |
ATX12V/EPS12V | 1x 4+4-pin (60cm) modular | |
PCIe |
1x 6/8-pin (55cm) modular 1x 6/8-pin (55cm) modular |
|
Peripheral |
3x SATA (ca. 40, 55, 70cm) modular 3x SATA (ca. 40, 55, 70cm) modular |
|
3x Molex (ca. 40, 55, 70cm) modular 3x Molex (ca. 40, 55, 70cm) modular 1x FDD adapter (ca. 10cm) modular |
Again the 24-pin and CPU cables are relatively long with 55-60cm. Both 6/8-pin cables are 5cm shorter than the ones Corsair used. The cable sleeving somewhat better but they still use different colors for all wires and no flat cables. The FDD connector is a separate adapter that splits off a Molex connector if needed; there are six Molex connectors available. The peripheral cables have exactly the same lengths like the ones from Corsair, what a coincidence!
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C'DaleRider - Tuesday, March 27, 2012 - link
Why do you persist in posting needlessly obtuse and difficult to decipher voltage regulation charts?Instead of making me do the math....such as figuring out what the +3.3V rail is at +0.61%, why don't you instead simply post what the damned rail started at and drifted down to under loads, such as +3.4V, +3.35V, +3.3V, etc.
No...you have to try to be "different", and by being different you have become obtuse and difficult to decipher.
Simple is good, complex is needless and just silly. I'd suggest you look at the way JonnyGuru and HardOCP lists their voltage and ripple/noise charts to get an idea of what nice, clean, and simple presentations of the information can be instead of your almost useless charts.
When I read reviews, I don't want to be bothered with having to do the calculations in my head to figure out what you mean by a +1% of the +12V rail means. (I'm guessing it's +12.12V, right? That's not hard, but then you get to +0.62% or -0.24% and that becomes stupidly hard.)
Sometimes trying to be different isn't better, just silly.
bobsmith1492 - Tuesday, March 27, 2012 - link
Percent change is a better metric especially comparing across different voltage rails. Everything electronic is specified in percentage tolerance. So percentage measured is the obvious choice.1% of 12V is pretty easy if you want absolute values for some reason. 12x1.01. I suggest you go back to middle school.
philipma1957 - Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - link
It arrived yesterday. Newegg had it for 69 on shellshocker 20 rebate is 49 and a 15 dollar gift card my cost was 37 dollars due to sales tax. At 37 bucks it is a good deal. I think I will put in a better fan. I will look to see if I can get the sanyo denki fan that the author has picked out. I will also add a piece of insulation between the modular pcb and the main pcb.Reading this info has inspired me to check on my 660watt seasonic psu as every once in a while the computer shuts down for 1 spilt second, it will not hurt to take a look. To me the biggest problem with the ocz in the review is the lake of input voltage regulation. This means a good ups/voltage regulator should supply the psu. I have that. I have some good thin insulation. So i will need to get a fan. well so far only 37 spent on this psu. I wonder what the sanyo fan costs.
Beenthere - Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - link
The Sanyo fan is $45.99... :(philipma1957 - Friday, March 30, 2012 - link
Thanks for the fan price. Too much so I grabbed an antec true quiet 140mm fan for about 15.50 at amazon. Both parts arrived on the 29th. I tested it with the stock fan and the antec a lot quieter. So my 37 dollar bargain is now about 52 bucks. I have a lowcost Nxzt case and I was able to route the antec's fan switch behind and lower then the cpu on the other side of the case. Since the case has easy access to that side panel I can switch the fan to low setting if I choose. I also was able to attach the fan's power cord to the mobo So I can monitor its speed .The unit appears well built and the solder work inside the case looked clean. I added a thin piece of rubber as suggested to prevent any arcing issues between the power jack pcb and the main pcb. I will get back to this with an update to let you know how well the unit holds up in daily use. I paid a total of 52-53 for this.
my 660 watt seasonic was 116. Still not sure if the seasonic has an issue or some other problem cause rare spilt second black outs every once in a while.
this ocz is going into my amd lower cost build. about (500)
while the seasonic is in my intel higher cost build. about (1k)
philipma1957 - Monday, April 2, 2012 - link
Amd fx-41002 x 4gb patriot/amd 1333 ram
gigabyte 970 atx mobo
a crucial m4 128gb ssd
a coolermaster 212 evo
a sapphire hd6670 passive cooled gpu
The psu runs very quiet . the antec fan is much quieter the the stock fan. seems like a good buy.
StrangerGuy - Monday, April 2, 2012 - link
$90 for a 550W PSU? Are you kidding me? And it's ONLY 80+ Bronze. I got a Seasonic S12 520W for only $60.I can see why there are so many players in the PSU market, all thanks to the enormous profits to the PSY FUD crowd who spouting nonsense like "400W isn't enough for the average gaming PC" brings.
philipma1957 - Tuesday, April 3, 2012 - link
you are corect it is not worth 90 bucks. but AR it is 70 at amazon. I paid 50 AR and I a got a 15 dollar gift card to boot. so it was 35 bucks. the fan was to loud and with the mod I did it was 52 bucks. it is worth 52 bucks.mikeymikec - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link
Considering how a desktop PC without a graphics card and a decent PSU can run virtually silent these days, I think more work could have been done in the audible noise from PSUs.My first thought in how to achieve this would be to do a review of 12-14cm chassis fans, pick the most quiet one, then use that as a reference for PSU testing in future. Give an opinion on the noise level on each PSU reviewed like you've done here (because fans can emit extra irritating noises like a whine while still being quiet, but also compare it to that one, also possibly measuring the noise level and providing measurements of, say, +2dB (or whatever is considered the best method of measuring audible noise levels) above reference fan.
I've bought a lot of Corsair VX range PSUs and a few since the VX range was discontinued, and the TX ... M range are much noisier, as in, they're easily the highest noise producer in a modern system. At least with the VX range the noise level was approximate the same as the CPU and chassis fans in the system (without either of those being unusually decent fans, a stock CPU fan and a Coolermaster 12cm fan that comes with the Coolermaster cases I typically use).
mikeymikec - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link
First para: I meant, more work could have been done to measure/analyse/give a useful opinion on the audible noise from these PSUs. What I can take away from this review is "they produce some audible noise".