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EVGA SuperNOVA P6
Table of Contents
EVGA just announced its SuperNOVA P6 series fully modular power supplies with power ratings of 650W, 750W, 850W, and 1000W. The SuperNOVA P6 is EVGA’s most compact 80+ platinum ATX power supply at only 140 mm long. All four models feature a full-bridge, LLC Resonant Rectification, and a DC-DC design providing excellent efficiency and voltage regulation. Currently, only the 850W and 1000W models are available and are priced at $219.99 and $299.99 respectively. The 650W and 750W versions are coming soon but prices have not been published. Here is EVGA’s official press release.
EVGA SuperNOVA P6 Series Power Supply
EVGA SuperNOVA P6
The EVGA SuperNOVA P6 power supplies feature a new platform design, using new materials and better layout placement to achieve greater performance with extremely low ripple and noise in an even smaller chassis. With a full-bridge, LLC Resonant Rectification, and DC-DC design, the SuperNOVA P6 provides rock-solid stability, uncompromising efficiency, and extremely tight voltage regulation.
Hardware OPP is designed to trip at 135% max wattage as a last resort to protect the system, but the SuperNOVA P6 also features firmware OPP to anticipate harmful load behavior 5-10% sooner by shutting off the power supply when over-power conditions persist longer than 1 ms while avoiding an instantaneous overload trigger protection malfunction during momentary peak wattage.
EVGA SuperNOVA P6 1000W
EVGA SuperNOVA P6 850W
EVGA SuperNOVA P6 750W
EVGA SuperNOVA P6 650W
Smaller Size, Bigger Performance
The improved efficiency and voltage regulation minimizes heat, allowing the SuperNOVA P6 to be EVGA’s shortest ATX Platinum-certified power supply.
Ultra-Quiet 135 mm FDB Fan with EVGA ECO Mode
To reduce noise, the SuperNOVA P6 maximizes the time the power supply stays silent or quiet at low to medium loads when ECO Mode is enabled.
John started writing and reviewing PC components for Overclockers.com in 2015, but his passion for PCs dates all the way back to the early 1980s. His first personal computer was a Commodore 64 with a cassette drive. As a dedicated member of the news team, he focuses his articles on new product releases and software updates. He reviews a wide variety of PC components including chassis, storage drives, keyboards, and more. John works in technology as a C.A.D. designer for a major automotive manufacturer. His other passions in life include motorcycles, hunting, guns, and football.
Sometimes even a quiet fan is too loud, for those situations Rosewill has you covered with this Silent Night PSU. It doesn’t have a loud fan. It doesn’t have a quiet fan. It doesn’t have a fan at all! The claim is that this makes it a 0dB PSU. It certainly goes a long way towards that goal, but fans aren’t the only source of noise from a PSU.
Antec just announced several high-end power supplies that will hit the shelves in early May. The Signature Series Platinum and Titanium PSUs are rated for a minimum of 1000w and sport generous 10-year warranties.
We’ve recently reviewed several NVIDIA GTX 980 based graphics cards here at Overclockers, and we came away impressed with their low power consumption, great performance, and “bang-for-the-buck” pricing. Today, we’re going to drop it down a notch and have a look at our first GTX 970. More specifically, the EVGA GTX 970 FTW. The factory overclock EVGA applied to the GTX 970 FTW is one of the highest we’ve ever seen, which leads us to believe EVGA is extremely confident in the headroom that’s available on these Maxwell 2 GPUs.
EVGA just announced its SuperNOVA P6 series fully modular power supplies with power ratings of 650W, 750W, 850W, and 1000W. The SuperNOVA P6 is EVGA's most compact 80+ platinum ATX power supply at only 140 mm long. All four models feature a full-bridge, LLC Resonant Rectification, and a DC-DC design providing excellent efficiency and voltage regulation. Currently, only the 850W and 1000W models are available and are priced at $219.99 and $299.99 respectively. The 650W and 750W versions are coming soon but prices have not been published. Here is EVGA's official press release.
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