parusski
Posts: 4804
Joined: 5/8/2000 From: Jackson Tn Status: offline
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Kudos apathetic lurker. GENERAL STATEMENT: This is my post. You shall not respond unless I approve of your response before you even make it. I'll figure out how to do that later. Just stick to my rules though. All rules and terms subject of change and delivery fee. Wanna know how much power you pc really uses?? Do two things, 1. Buy an AC power meter and just test you computer, and computer monitor of course. 2. Read the rantings of a mad man below. The 200, 250, or 550-watts listed on your power supply only means it's theoretical maximum capacity. Also, having a 500 watt power supply does not necessarily use more than a 300-watt unit. That depends on how many components are connected. Just add the wattage requirement of everything; AGP Video Card, PCI Express Video Card, Average PCI Card,floppy(still some around), cd, dvd player/recorder Hardd drives, mother board and processor. Then take the total of those items and multiply by 1.5.(Use 1.5 since current systems draw heavily on the +12v output, and PS's are much more efficient and stable when loaded to 40-70% of MAXIMUM capacity) this should tell you about how much power your PS should be. Be wary of High end video card manufacturers pushing you towards huge wattage units. Just add the power needed from a new card to all other components, multiply by 1.5 and that should be all you need. My electric company has an online calculator(yours may also have one) connected directly to the digital meter they installed at my home. The calculator is real time. I plug my PC into a Watts Up? power meter, then I enter the data of two days monitoring from the meter into my power company site and the power company tells me how much my computer costs per hour. Just a couple days ago, after seeing the thread still alive I connected my pc to my meter and just about an hour ago I entered the results: Computer: average 1044 watts(87% efficiency)/24 hours a day costs:-====$0.27 per day. See, my pc does not continuously use 1200-watts, nor should anyone's PC be at maximum consumption 24 hours a day. About $8.00 per month is cheap when I consider the chance any MS OS might decided to go awol after a shutdown. I know the Microsoft company line, I have been a Windows OS alpha and beta tester since 1997. But turning off a PC can indeed be a throw of the dice. And even with Windows 7 my own and a large number of my companies pc's occasionally doe not reboot as the should after being turned off. Well, since I "display a very low level of intelligence...and...the logical side of your(MY) brain never developed past a 2nd grade level?..." I will stop before I upset anyone, because I tend to make "nonsensical post(s)" with "no substance"
< Message edited by parusski -- 9/30/2010 5:34:01 AM >
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"I hate newspapermen. They come into camp and pick up their camp rumors and print them as facts. I regard them as spies, which, in truth, they are. If I killed them all there would be news from Hell before breakfast."- W.T. Sherman
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