Rosewill Tachyon 750 W Power Supply Review

Ripple and Noise Tests

Voltages at the power supply outputs must be as “clean” as possible, with no noise or oscillation (also known as “ripple”). The maximum ripple and noise levels allowed are 120 mV for +12 V and -12 V outputs, and 50 mV for +5 V, +3.3 V and +5VSB outputs. All values are peak-to-peak figures. We consider a power supply as being top-notch if it can produce half or less of the maximum allowed ripple and noise levels.

The Rosewill Tachyon 750 W provided extremely low ripple and noise levels, as you can see in the table below.

Input Test 1 Test 2 Test 3 Test 4 Test 5
+12VA 11.4 mV 17.2 mV 23.2 mV 27.2 mV 33.8 mV
+12VB 11.0 mV 17.8 mV 22.6 mV 27.8 mV 35.2 mV
+5 V 6.8 mV 8.2 mV 8.4 mV 9.4 mV 12.6 mV
+3.3 V 5.0 mV 6.4 mV 6.6 mV 8.4 mV 15.2 mV
+5VSB 6.2 mV 6.6 mV 7.0 mV 8.8 mV 20.6 mV
-12 V 8.4 mV 8.2 mV 7.8 mV 9.4 mV 11.6 mV

Below you can see the waveforms of the outputs during test five.

Rosewill Tachyon 750wFigure 22: +12VA input from load tester during test five at 749.8 W (33.8 mV)

Rosewill Tachyon 750wFigure 23: +12VB input from load tester during test five at 749.8 W (35.2 mV)

Rosewill Tachyon 750wFigure 24: +5V rail during test five at 749.8 W (12.6 mV)

Rosewill Tachyon 750wFigure 25: +3.3 V rail during test five at 749.8 W (15.2 mV)

Let’s see if we can pull more than 750 W from this unit.

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