Ultra LSX 750 Power Supply Review
Load Tests
Contents
We conducted several tests with this power supply, as described in the article Hardware Secrets Power Supply Test Methodology.
First we tested this power supply with five different load patterns, trying to pull around 20%, 40%, 60%, 80%, and 100% of its labeled maximum capacity (actual percentage used listed under “% Max Load”), watching the behavior of the reviewed unit under each load. In the table below, we list the load patterns we used and the results for each load.
If you add all the powers listed for each test, you may find a different value than what is posted under “Total” below. Since each output can have a slight variation (e.g., the +5 V output working at +5.10 V), the actual total amount of power being delivered is slightly different than the calculated value. In the “Total” row, we are using the real amount of power being delivered, as measured by our load tester.
The +12VA and +12VB inputs listed below are the two +12 V independent inputs from our load tester. During our tests, the +12VA and +12VB input were connected to the power supply single +12 V rail (the EPS12V connector was installed on the +12VB input of our load tester).
| Input | Test 1 | Test 2 | Test 3 | Test 4 | Test 5 |
| +12VA | 5 A (60 W) | 11 A (132 W) | 16 A (192 W) | 22 A (264 W) | 27 A (324 W) |
| +12VB | 5 A (60 W) | 10 A (120 W) | 16 A (192 W) | 21 A (252 W) | 27 A (324 W) |
| +5V | 2 A (10 W) | 4 A (20 W) | 6 A (30 W) | 8 A (40 W) | 10 A (50 W) |
| +3.3 V | 2 A (6.6 W) | 4 A (13.2 W) | 6 A (19.8 W) |
8 A (26.4 W) | 10 A (33 W) |
| +5VSB | 1 A (5 W) | 1.5 A (7.5 W) | 2 A (10 W) | 2.5 A (12.5 W) | 3 A (15 W) |
| -12 V | 0.5 A (6 W) | 0.5 A (6 W) | 0.5 A (6 W) | 0.5 A (6 W) | 0.5 A (6 W) |
| Total | 149.3 W | 299.4 W | 447.8 W | 595.4 W | 745.2 W |
| % Max Load | 19.9% | 39.9% | 59.7% | 79.4% | 99.4% |
| Room Temp. | 46.4° C | 47.1° C | 47.6° C | 47.0° C | 47.5° C |
| PSU Temp. | 47.3° C | 48.7° C | 49.8° C | 49.1° C | 50.0° C |
| Voltage Regulation | Pass | Pass | Pass | Pass | Pass |
| Ripple and Noise | Failed at +5VSB | Failed at +5VSB | Failed at +5VSB | Failed at +5VSB | Failed at +5VSB |
| AC Power | 181.1 W | 347.6 W | 519.2 W | 699.0 W | 889.0 W |
| Efficiency | 82.4% | 86.1% | 86.2% | 85.2% | 83.8% |
| AC Voltage | 112.5 V | 111.3 V | 109.4 V | 106.3 V | 105.3 V |
| Power Factor | 0.972 | 0.989 | 0.994 | 0.996 | 0.997 |
| Final Result | Pass | Pass | Pass | Pass | Pass |
The Ultra LSX 750 can really deliver its labeled wattage at high temperatures.
Efficiency was excellent, between 82.4% and 86.2%. This is great, because we are tired of seeing 80 Plus Bronze power supplies that can’t achieve 82% minimum at high temperatures, and the Ultra LSX 750 W can.
Voltage regulation was very good, with all voltages within 3% of their nominal values, except the -12 V output during all tests and the +5 V during test five (these outputs were still inside the proper range, though). The ATX12V specification allows voltages to be up to 5% from their nominal values (10% for the -12 V output). Therefore this power supply presents voltages closer to their nominal values than necessary most of the time.
Noise and ripple levels were always way below the maximum allowed on all outputs except on +5VSB, which was always way above the maximum allowed, between 260.4 mV in test one and 390.6 mV in test two. Below you can see the results for the power supply outputs during test number five. The maximum allowed is 120 mV for the +12 V and -12 V outputs, and 50 mV for the +5 V, +3.3 V, and +5VSB outputs. All values are peak-to-peak figures.
Figure 19: +12VA input from load tester during test five at 745.2 W (41.6 mV)
Figure 20: +12VB input from load tester during test five at 745.2 W (53.4 mV)
Figure 21: +5V rail during test five at 745.2 W (19.4 mV)
Figure 22: +3.3 V rail during test five at 745.2 W (23.2 mV)
Figure 23: +5VSB rail during test fiveat 745.2 W (390.6 mV)
Let’s see if we can pull even more from the Ultra LSX 750.
