Corsair are using their NR135P fan inside the RMi Series 750W power supply. This fan has intake blades specifically designed to move a high volume of air through the power supply components with less noise than a conventional fan design. Corsair claim the fan blades are properly balanced to help reduce resonance at higher speeds. This fan incorporates fluid dynamic bearing to help prolong life and reduce noise further than a ball bearing or sleeve bearing design.
Corsair make the point that they have invested a lot of time into ensuring these units do not exhibit any ‘coil whine'. This can be caused by poor winding of a transformer or coil. Also the conducting and insulating layers of a capacitor can vibrate excessively if the components are not wound properly. These vibrations can lead to audible noise that many people class as ‘coil whine'.
This is a CWT design and the build quality is actually very high. Soldering quality on the PCB and modular connection board is good. The 750W and 850W also have fewer PFC MOSFETs and lower power PWM MOSFETs than the 1000W unit which we have also reviewed today. The 750W also has fewer +12V output rectifier diodes than the 850W and 1000W.
The power supply is using all Japanese capacitors in the primary and secondary stage. In the primary stage are two high grade 105C capacitors from Nippon Chemi Con – a 400V 470uF (KMR series) and 400V 390uF (KMW Series) unit. These are as good as it will get for a mainstream consumer unit.
How well does a 750W PSU perform with dual 390X ?
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That’s kind of pushing it to the limits.
The MSI R9 390X (only one) averages 344W during gaming..
During Furmark it does 424W. A 1000-1200W PSU would be better suited, especially if you are going to overclock as well.
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/MSI/R9_390X_Gaming/28.html