Because EVGA is generally reliable psu's and without mishandling the unit and a lil bit of patience when cleaning your psu. You can get it for cheaper i believe.
@@luminumlx2604 its not really difficult. if you place something wrong. It just wont start. But if you buy a really cheap one, it maybe could. but most times it wouldnt. you can also search where to put what cable. But in the end, you do you my friend
Probably less than 30% of ppl build their own pc's. The other 70% could care less about the cables as long at that PC boots up and runs smoothly when they need it to work. I personally have built all my own PC's for the past 20+ years, and i love the Modular power supplies.
@@nintendomusic2199 I don't think the actual build has changed a lot, but the newer case designs and modular pwr supplies definitely make them easier and 'cleaner looking' to build Today...that's my opinion. I think it really just depends on what you are wanting, the cooling requirements, etc. I don't do liquid cooling because i'm not a big over-clock freak, but in that instance, it can be quite a bit more complicated to build a modern pc.
Hi i have a question....i have a non modular psu and im planning to buy gpu now the problem is how do i connect my gpu to my psu that my psu doesent have any cables to attch to my gpu
I was messing with the power meter yesterday and it doesn't or didnt have rtx cards (specifically the 2080ti ftw3 or kingpin) updated to be selectable yet
The RTX 2080 Ti is on the Power Meter, we added it at the launch of the product. We do not specify between different models of RTX 2080 Ti as all of them have an Official TDP of 250w. The RTX cards are lower down on the list as it is alphabetical with RTX coming after GTX
I just got an EVGA Supernova 650 G5 open box for $75. I'm so excited to get this for my first build. I wanted a full modular and this leaves me some headroom if I ever need more power.
I was thinking, why are your company producing only GPUs with Nvidia graphic chips? I think EVGA Radeon cards will not be bad. Sorry if I have mistakes in this "sentence"
Well it's kinda different. Ever heard of Sapphire graphics card? Well they are the EVGA of Radeon graphics. EVGA makes the top best nvidia graphics card, the components used in almost all nvidia graphics card are by EVGA. The same thing for Radeon graphics card where the components used in RAdeon graphics card are made by Sapphire. Correct me if I'm wrong.
Just a long note about Thermaltake. I just went through 2 weeks of hell trying to diagnose a new build that had a new Asus ROG Strix x570e Gaming and I used one of these modular Thermaltake PSU's. I had it all together and posting and I was making use of the 8 sata ports on the board with a 2TB NVME and 5 Sata hard drives installed. The problem is only 3 were showing up. I moved the wires around, swapped modular ports, removed the PCB for the Hot swap tray, even traded motherboards but they still did not show up. It finally turned out to be a bad modular sata wire off the PSU. I finally had to use one of the molex power wires that came with the PSU and rig it with adapters to change to Sata connectors and voila', they showed up. It was too much wire and too fat to use that way though. 2 weeks of swapping parts and wires, I guess I couldn't believe that short little wire was bad. It was painfully painful to get a new wire sent from Thermaltake with all the paperwork so I did a replacement of the power supply with Amazon and just took the wire out and sent back the good PSU sans bad wire so no one will ever try and use it. I'm letting everyone know, it can be a bad wire.
@2:40 Wouldn't you have to change the cables with the specific PSU you put into your system? If not, are PSU cables from the same vendor modular with each PSU they produce?
Honestly what's the actual difference between a semi modular and full modular power supply? Do you often find yourself wishing you didn't have CPU and motherboard cables? They're almost always going to be plugged into a full modular anyway.
@@Porkleaker But if a person isn't going to use a sleeve kit then they are paying extra for a full modular when a semi modular would do. Another possible solution is to just use a sleeved extension for the mb connections most of the cabling would be hiddenbehind the motherboard tray anyway might as well save a few buck. Now I do have to agree with the idea of letting most non modular PS go the way of the dodo. On all, but the most low wattage PS with just the bare minimum of connectors to begin with, they are just a massive entanglement sitting on the bottom of the case.