I bought this a few weeks ago in order to build my parents a computer. Well two things happened, they got themelves a new computer and I bought a new car. So they don't need a new computer and I don't have the money to build a computer anyway. It is brand new, I dont have the box because I had put it into an Antec 300 case in preparation to put everything together and threw away the box. Its warranty is still good. I am pretty sure it is for 3 yrs. I am asking $30 for it which is much less than newegg. Its model number is EA380, it is 380 watts but can handle plenty of computer. I am running the same power supply in my girlfriends computer with a Intel quad core 6600 and a 9600 GT video card. This is also very energy efficient and will probably pay for itself within a few months for people with computers which are always turned on.here is the newegg pagehttp://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817371005&Tpk=ea380[Edited on December 4, 2008 at 9:52 PM. Reason : spelling...][Edited on December 4, 2008 at 9:52 PM. Reason : spelling again]
12/4/2008 9:49:44 PM
12/4/2008 9:57:40 PM
well, it has been extremely stable for me, it ran through memtest86 and some other tests I ran before I gave it to her. It wasn't overclocked before I gave it to her, but last time I was on her computer I tried bumping up the FSB on it to see what I could get it to. I got it to 3.0 ghz and ran it at that for a while. I didn't run any tests on it but it seemed stable for what i could tell in the hour I was on it. Look at what people are running on this power supply, it has served me well on her computer and I would trust it.
12/4/2008 10:01:42 PM
the 9600GT peaks at 240 wattsthe 6600 peaks at 95-105 depending on the modelyou're already at at least 335 watts, and that's without the hard drives, motherboard components, cd drives, and pci cardshow, exactly, do you justify that working well with a 380 watt peak power supply?
12/4/2008 10:10:13 PM
alright man it runs stable and has for 6 months now, so I honestly don't know why you're trying to bash me. I didn't go and try to say it can run an Intel i7 chipset and quad SLI, I stated what I have running on the same power supply at this very moment. So if you would please let me have some constructive posts without you trying to bolster your post count that'd be awesome...
12/4/2008 10:16:00 PM
lol, n00b pwnt
12/4/2008 10:26:38 PM
I'm gonna go out on a limb here and say 380W is probably a conservative thermal rating at 50 deg C ambient, and a continuous maximum rather than a peak rating as well. As long as she's not running it in a boiler room it more than likely maintains it's voltage within spec and obviously is stable under synthetic loads, give the guy a break [Edited on December 4, 2008 at 10:33 PM. Reason : .]
12/4/2008 10:33:20 PM
12/4/2008 11:09:01 PM
12/5/2008 10:38:37 AM
bttt
12/6/2008 5:29:55 PM
$10
12/6/2008 6:06:29 PM
btt $20 gets it
12/11/2008 12:50:10 PM
welcome to tww, the land of the know-it-alls
12/11/2008 12:52:05 PM
^and consequential good low-ball deals
12/11/2008 2:21:24 PM