Yousuf Khan wrote
> Rod Speed wrote
>> Yousuf Khan wrote
>>> Well, we've discussed those on csiphs already, mainly the optical drives sending controller error messages even when
>>> they are not being used,
>> OK, I dont believe that those would be because you
>> are exceeding the 600W rating of the power supply.
> Maybe not the overall power supply rating, but maybe some of the individual rails might be undercharged.
You mean overloaded.
No, that isnt possible. The video card needs 2 75W supplys.
Even if they are both supplied from a single 12V rail in that supply,
thats only 150W from a rail that can deliver 192W, so there is bags
of margin in hand and you know the video card works fine anyway.
You cant possibly be exceeding what the other rails can deliver,
even 10 hard drives wouldnt do that if they are all starting at once,
and the symptoms you see arent when the drives are starting up
anyway with the optical drive symptoms.
>> I meant that the power supply may be failing, putting more noise
>> on the rails than is allowed. If thats the case, just replacing it with another copy of the 600W supply should see
>> that problem go away.
>>> and I'm also noticing some occasional spin retry errors on a few of
>>> my internal HDD's.
>> Thats unlikely to be because doesnt have enough current on the
>> 12V rail even tho you do have quite a few hard drives from memory.
> Well, I do have six internal hard drives right now, and one optical drive (Blu-Ray burner).
Thats fine even if they are all on a single 192W 16A rail.
And you dont see the optical drive symptom at hard drive spinup time anyway.
> It's the number of error messages that I'm seeing on the BR burner that's got me most worried,
Yes, and they wont be happening when all those drives are spinning
up. Thats the only time that those drives will be taking a lot of current.
> but also recently I saw a worrying pop-up message from Hard Disk Sentinel that it is predicting an imminent failure of
> my boot drive too.
Its notorious for crying wolf.
> I don't know which of the rails all of these drives are connected to, but if they are all connected to the same rail
> (very likely) then they might be all sharing current from a diminished resource.
I doubt it. I bet that if you do total the startup currents for all those
drives which you havent specified, they wont exceed the surge rating
of one of the rails. And even if they do, the most that you might see
is a few slow starts with the worst of the drives which might be what
HDS is mindlessly screaming about.
> I wonder how much current each of the optical and hard drives use?
Its in the datasheets for all of them. You want the startup current.
You dont need to worry with the optical drive, it will be
be peanuts compared with the total of the hard drives.
>>>> That wouldnt normally be the case unless you have one hell of a video card in it.
>>> Well, the video card is not a monster of any kind, it's more upper mainstream, an AMD Radeon 6870.
>> Yeah, it only need 2 75W power connectors.
>> The 12V rails on that power supply are way above what it needs.
> One or two rails would go to the motherboard, another one would go to the video card,
Those rails can supply all the video card needs fine.
The video card needs 150W and each rail can deliver 192W
> and the last rail would be left for all of the rest of the peripherals.
Likely. But thats still plenty.
> I've mostly had no problems with motherboard components (CPU, RAM, PCI cards), no problems with the video card,
So it must be getting the power it needs.
> but the rest of the system is all supplied by one rail, such as drives and fans and lights.
Yes, but even if that rail is a bit overloaded when the hard
drives are all spinning up at once, the worst that can do is
see the spinup time a bit longer than it would otherwise be
with just one drive connected.
They clearly do spin up.
> I won't really notice any power problems with the fans or lights, but the drives might be pretty sensitive.
Nope, they arent at spinnup time and thats the only
time they are likely to be overloading even one rail.
>> That power supply handles the video card fine with 2 of the rails
>> and you have two more for your hard drives which wont take
>> anything like 384W even if they are all trying to spin up at once.
> I don't think the video card gets two whole rails to itself.
The video card datasheet does say it has two power connectors.
> The motherboard 24-pin connector is one rail which would power the PCI/PCI-e slots, chipset and RAM; and maybe it'll
> feed a few Watts to the CPU too. Then another 6-pin plug would be a rail for the CPU alone, which also plugs into the
> motherboard.
And clearly that works fine.
> Then a couple of video power connectors would go into the video card, which would likely come from one rail by itself.
> The video card would also receive some power from the motherboard through the PCI-e slot. So the video card might have
> at most maybe 1.5 rails for its use (partial motherboard rail & full video rail).
And it works fine so it must be getting what it needs 12V wise.
> And the last rail for everything else in the system.
You dont kinow that with the fans etc particularly.
Yes, the hard drives may well be on one rail, but that should
be fine too and the worst you might see is some of the drives
being a bit slow to spin up, a complete yawn basically.
It wont be whats producing the symptoms with the optical drive
because the hard drives will have spun up long before you ever
write anything with the optical drive and so the current draw of
the hard drives will be well down on the startup currents.
>>> and that level is pretty close to the maximum power rating (within 96-97%) of my old PS.
>> Thats the problem with those power supply 'calculators', they
>> dont actually calculate what matters, the 12V rail currents.
>> And the 900W supply you are considering only has 1A more
>> 12V current available anyway.
> Well, I'm not really considering a 900W PS, more likely a 750W one.
So you may not end up with any more 12V current at all.
>>> When I first obtained this 600W PS, the PS calculator showed that my system requirement was only in the upper 400W
>>> range.
>> Do you mean that the calculator has changed, or that
>> what you have in that system has changed that much ?
> Yup, the stuff in the system has changed that much. This system is in a constant state of evolution, including the
> case itself. I upgraded
> from a mid-tower with a capacity for only four 3.5" drives to one with six 3.5" drives, and then it quickly evolved to
> to fill up those additional drive slots. Also there was a video card upgrade, and a
> CPU upgrade along the way too.
I've never believed those calculators, I calculate the actual rail currents.
>>> When you add it up, yes the 4 separate rails come
>> out to about 64A, but the point is is it possible that some of the rails are overloaded by themselves?
>> Nope, not with that particular video card.
> I don't think the video card is the issue here at all! Just those
> drives in combination with all of the other powered peripherals
> inside that system.
They arent all necessarily on just one rail and their currents arent
significant anyway compared with the hard drive startup currents.
> I played around with the figures in one of the PS calculators, and I found out that it's assuming 13W per 7200-rpm
> SATA
> hard drive, 24W per 7200-rpm IDE HDD,
Thats pretty bogus when what matters is the startup currents.
> 29W per Blu-Ray burner, 34W per DVD burner.
Its silly to assume that all blue ray and dvd burners will consume
the same amount within 1W
> Based on that I currently have 129W in internal drives alone (4 SATA HDD, 2 IDE HDD, 1 BR).
And one rail can deliver 192W, bags of margin.
> When I previously had the dual DVD burners rather than the single Blu-Ray, I had 168W worth of drives!
Still fine for a 192W rail.
> This is now starting to explain why my two DVD burners failed simultaneously.
Nope. Even if the rail was overloaded, and it isnt,
that wont kill two DVD burners simultaneously.
> I also have 4x 250mm case fans on the system (they came with the new case). Each is regular fan is rated at 12W, and
> each LED fan is 13W. Based on that I have 49W worth of fans (3 regular, 1 LED). Adding to the previous figures of 129W
> and 168W brings them to overall totals of 178W and 217W, respectively!
Yebbut the hard drives numbers are bogus.
> If I only have 192W to play with per rail, then I was well over when I had two DVD burners, and I'm sitting on the
> edge still now.
Nope, because the worst that might happen is that a couple of the
hard drives might spin up a little more slowly than they would if they
were the only drive in the system and thats a complete yawn in practice.
>>> Would it be easier to distribute the power if there
>>> was a single larger rail rather than 4 smaller rails?
>> No, in fact its harder because you cant do a remote sense
>> so that the highest current rail is seeing 12V at the pins
>> without increasing what the other connects get at the pins.
>> Not that that matter much, the specs on the variation in the 12V rails is pretty wide.
>> And you have the other problem with a single rail too, limiting the
>> current to say 75A can still see a decent fire with some shorts.
> That is obviously a worry, and that's why they didn't do this in the past. I'm hoping that now that they are doing it,
> that they may have found a way to keep it under control these days?
Nope, it isnt even possible. 75A is one hell of a current at DC.