View Full Version : Antec TrueControl 550w?
ginja117
02-08-10, 11:03 PM
Hi i was wondering if someone could tell me whether this power supply could run a gtx 260 or hd 4870?
ScottinIndy
02-09-10, 12:04 AM
On a normal desktop setup it should be fine.
burebista
02-09-10, 12:17 AM
I'd be careful. Very careful. It's an old ATX12V v1.3 with a face lift on +12V. Beside that I'd take a look at caps because it's prone to sudden death syndrome from Fuhjyyu caps.
And those 24A on +12V don't look promising too. Heck, Corsair CX400 has 30A on +12V.
Bottom line I'd say that it will work but somehow in crossload. My advice is next on your shopping list should be a modern PSU (ATX12v v2.x).
ginja117
02-09-10, 12:32 AM
this one is a New Zealand version and has 30A on the 12v rail would this make a difference?
burebista
02-09-10, 12:37 AM
Yes, it's better. More amps on +12V is good. :)
What's your full system specs?
ginja117
02-09-10, 12:49 AM
My specs:
AMD athlon x2 7750
Gigabyte GA-MA785GM-US2H
2gb corsair dominator
1x sata 500gb WD
1x sata dvd/rw
burebista
02-09-10, 01:03 AM
You should be fine but my advice remain, when you can buy a modern PSU. Corsair PSUs usually are best-buy price/performance wise.
ginja117
02-09-10, 01:09 AM
I would go with corsair but they are a bit out of my budget
RollingThunder
02-09-10, 10:43 AM
I would go with corsair but they are a bit out of my budget
Ginja,
Would it still be out of your budget if an old power supply of obsolete technology takes out an expensive GTX 260 or an HD 4870 because it's cross-loaded?
Bobnova
02-09-10, 10:56 AM
I highly recommend the corsair cx400. It should run a 4870 just fine, mine ran crossfired 4830/4850, that's a 220w load, seeing as a 4870 comes in around 160-170, you should be fine.
Of course if you're running an i7 also, you'll need more.
petteyg359
02-09-10, 07:47 PM
Would it still be out of your budget if an old power supply of obsolete technology takes out an expensive GTX 260 or an HD 4870 because it's cross-loaded?
Second that. Better to spend $50 extra on the PSU now rather than spend $200 for replacements when a cheap PSU does a murder-suicide with your GPU or other hardware.
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2012, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.