kuun wrote:ACK
i don't have a cam

KliK wrote:also here is the link for PSU consumption: http://www.extreme.outervision.com/index.jsp
remember that you have to find out about the cels on www.intel.com and when you add (cpu1 + cpu2) multiply that by factor 1,25 and put the similar CPU consumtion for yours there...
in my case i have 400W PSU in case that in peak power eats 375W...so i have to do it...and that will leave 400W PSU only for motherboard...will post pics later...
well the 2 CPU use about 45-65W...and i have 3HDD, CDRW, DVD-ROM, deck for HDD, about 10 coolers (lots of 80x80), 2 voodoo, one old SB32, USB adapter 3+1, net card...purrkur wrote:KliK wrote:also here is the link for PSU consumption: http://www.extreme.outervision.com/index.jsp
remember that you have to find out about the cels on www.intel.com and when you add (cpu1 + cpu2) multiply that by factor 1,25 and put the similar CPU consumtion for yours there...
in my case i have 400W PSU in case that in peak power eats 375W...so i have to do it...and that will leave 400W PSU only for motherboard...will post pics later...
Hehehe! I seriously doubt that your BP6 system is eating up close to 400 watts! The easiest way to check this type of stuff out is by going out and buying a wattmeter. They don't cost that much and they are much more effective than a theoretical calculation that you point out.
If you take a look at this post what Wolfram wrote, he has a loaded BP6 with 2x366@523MHz processors and all. He measured it and found that under 100% load it was pulling a measly 108 watts. I have also reported elsewhere here in the forums (can't find the post right now) that I was running dual P3's on a modified BP6 (866@650MHz) with a Geforce2 graphics card, NIC, single harddrive, Soundblaster sound card and using a noname 250W power supply without any issues at all.
Dual ATX's has a cool geek factor but it is hardly needed for a BP6

jaybird wrote:All stuffed into a SuperMicro server case and a Sparkle 350W PS!
It all worked and worked quite well untill PS went and a bunch of caps went at the same time, switched to backup BP6 w/2 366's @ 584 (air cooled 72w Pelts, on separate DUAL ATX PS, and YES, very easy to do!).
The backup BP6 used all the same pieces as the dual PIII rig and a 350w ps worked just fine.
The point is you cannot always "go by the numbers"
purrkur wrote:Yep, and Wolfram is running a BP6 with:
2x Celeron 366@523,
2x 8cm-CPU-fans
2x 256 SDRAM,
Matrox G400,
Adaptec 2940 SCSI,
Soundblaster AWE64,
AVM Fritz! PCI, Lifetec TV-Karte 9415,
RTL8139D NIC,
3Com 3C905B NIC,
Samsung SV1203N (120GB),
LiteOn CDRW 31240,
and a 3,5-Zoll Floppy
All on a No-Name 250W PSU (which I was also doing with my dual P3's).
So in short, you got 2 harddrives, one optical drive, 8 fans, a voodoo board and a USB adapter more than he does, while you don't have a SCSI adapter, second NIC and a TV card that he does. Are you saying that the few extra components mentioned here above will add about 260W extra above what he has got??
I still think his wattmeter is more accurate than the calculation page you pointed out. I would also like to point out that you are saying that your system draws more power under load than a Dual core Pentium 840 Extreme Edition in a modern motherboard, 2 harddrives, and a couple of GeForce 6800 GT's in a SLi setup that Toms Hardware found pulling a meager 342 watts under full load. Check out this page for full details on that test. The dual core AMD system ran out of steam pulling 269 watts at full load with a similar setup.
In other words, I don't trust your watts web calculator one bit![]()
But do send us photos! We are suckers for those

KliK wrote:but i got 3 graphic cards in my system...also older RAM get more Wattage per slot, and i got all 3 of them filled...maybe that clac is a bullshit...but maybe when it adds, multiplie and divide wattage, maybe it uses one neat trick! given divided by factor 0,65, and it leaves me with the 375W in 400W system...i sure didn+t write that calc, but maybe some part of my system freezes...and it sure freezes a lot if I burn lots of CDs...so, yeah i'm thinking of dual ATX...at least a tryout...
one for the MBO and thing on it, and one for all HDD, CDRW, DVD & maybe all the (fans except for the CPU fans)...
(where is that drilling machine?!?)
purrkur wrote:I would still like to see what a wattmeter plugged in between your computer and your outlet would say
purrkur wrote:KliK wrote:but i got 3 graphic cards in my system...also older RAM get more Wattage per slot, and i got all 3 of them filled...maybe that clac is a bullshit...but maybe when it adds, multiplie and divide wattage, maybe it uses one neat trick! given divided by factor 0,65, and it leaves me with the 375W in 400W system...i sure didn+t write that calc, but maybe some part of my system freezes...and it sure freezes a lot if I burn lots of CDs...so, yeah i'm thinking of dual ATX...at least a tryout...
one for the MBO and thing on it, and one for all HDD, CDRW, DVD & maybe all the (fans except for the CPU fans)...
(where is that drilling machine?!?)
I would still like to see what a wattmeter plugged in between your computer and your outlet would say

jaybird wrote:I can attest to that purrkur!
Dual PIII 1100/100/256/1.75v @ 110 fsb on BP6 for over 3 years.
3, 256 PC133 RAM sticks
Matrox G400, 32 meg dual hd vid card
SBLive Platinum w/Live-drive
Adaptec SCSII card for Microtek X6EL scanner
generic 4 port Firewire card
WinTV GO! capture card
a 20 gig WD 7200rpm hdd and a 60gig Maxtor 7200rpm hdd
4 optical drives: Liteon 52 x 24 x 52 'burner, Sony DVD-RW/RAM burner, Pioneer S104 DVD player, ZEN 52X TrueX CD-ROM player
'Mini-Peltier" cooler on BX chip set
4 LARGE case fans
2 GlobalWIN FEP-32's with 36cfm fans
All stuffed into a SuperMicro server case and a Sparkle 350W PS!
It all worked and worked quite well untill PS went and a bunch of caps went at the same time, switched to backup BP6 w/2 366's @ 584 (air cooled 72w Pelts, on separate DUAL ATX PS, and YES, very easy to do!).
The backup BP6 used all the same pieces as the dual PIII rig and a 350w ps worked just fine.
The point is you cannot always "go by the numbers"
OBTW, in the winter time I can close the forced air heat vent in my office at home and open a window (most of the time) and still stay plenty warm with all those power supplies running(I live in Wisconsin, avg. winter temps in my area, 20 Deg. F)
![]()
Regards,
jaybird

jaybird wrote:Thats why I don't buy cheap a-- power supplies any more!


davd_bob wrote:If memory serves, I have a 175watt PSU connected to my test board(never enough time to actually run any tests) and it seems to be fine.
I think also have a 135watt butt have been scared to try it..
davd_bob wrote:What would be the possable downside to using to small a PSU?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests