Silverstone, a leading producer of power supply units, computer cases and other PC hardware, is about to introduce the world’s first small form-factor SFX PSUs that can deliver up to 700W of power and which are compliant with Ecos Consulting’s 80 Plus Gold and Platinum guidelines. The Silverstone 700W SFX-L power supply unit will be the most powerful small PSU on the planet when it is officially released in the coming weeks. KitGuru was given an exclusive first look at the newcomer on Thursday.
SFF PCs get extreme performance
Traditionally, small form-factor systems featured low-power components and low-wattage power supply units because it was impossible to efficiently cool-down power-hungry components. As a result, small PCs were typically positioned as multimedia or office computers, but not as gaming machines. However, in the recent years demand for powerful SFF PCs catalyzed system makers to reconsider positioning of such personal computers. As a result, Silverstone pioneered SFX PSUs with high wattage that can deliver enough power to performance ultra-high-end hardware, such as Intel Core i7 Extreme Edition processors, Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan graphics cards and so on. SFX PSUs are slimmer, shorter and narrower than standard ATX power supply units, yet they deliver comparable wattage nowadays.
The need for 700W SFX PSU
At present, the most advanced SFX PSU in the market is the Silverstone Strider SST-SX600-G SFX launched last year that can deliver up to 600W of power to PC components. For Computex 2015, Silverstone has something even more impressive: 700W SFX power supply units for small form-factor multi-GPU systems.
“A specialist system manufacturer in Europe contacted Silverstone about driving a pair of GeForce GTX Titan X cards in a small form-factor chassis and that kick-started the project,” explained Tony Ou, the technical marketing expert at Silverstone.
The first SFX PSUs for multi-GPU PCs
The 700W SFX PSU from Silverstone has the same height and width as other SFX power supply units, but is 3cm longer, which gives additional flexibility to the company’s design team, but which still complies with the SFX standard. Unlike other SFX PSUs, the new one has two sets of PCI Express 6-pin + 8-pin auxiliary power connectors to drive two high-performance graphics cards.
“Despite the additional 3cm length, it is still within the SFX spec, but to make the length clearer to customers, Silverstone will be using the ‘-L’ suffix to indicate a slightly longer card,” explained Mr. Ou.
The 700W Silverstone Strider FX PSU uses a special 120mm fan that is very shallow, in order to fit within the physical space allowed. The Silverstone design team are still deciding on whether to turn the fan off when internal temperatures are low. It is possible that they may opt for a really slow spin speed when idling in a bid to ensure that the PCs are really silent, but still do not overheat.
“The decision will be taken in the next day or two – as production begins,” said the technical marketing expert.
The first SFX PSU to get 80 Plus Platinum certificate
Silverstone will offer two 700W SFX-L PSUs: one with 80 Plus Gold certificate from Ecos Consulting and another one with 80 Plus Platinum certificate. The latter will be the first SFX power supply unit to carry the 80 Plus Platinum logotype.
“While 80 Plus is a big thing for enthusiasts, it is more important in a small form-factor chassis because of space and heat issues,” explained Tony Ou.
In order to get the “80 Plus Platinum” certificate from Ecos, a PSU has to be 90 – 94 per cent efficient under a 20 per cent, 50 per cent and 100 per cent load.
“Development on these PSUs has been amazing,” said Mr. Ou. “From three years ago, when no one had even an 80 Plus Silver [SFX] power supply – to the launch of the world’s first Platinum rated unit – it is an impressive feat of engineering.”
Pricing yet to be determined
At present the 600W Silverstone Strider SST-SX600-G SFX modular 80 Plus Gold PSU retails for £104.99 in the U.K. and costs $118 – $125 in the U.S. The final pricing of the 700W SFX power supply units is unknown, but it is likely that they will cost a similar amount of money.
“We are working on final pricing, but it is possible that the new 700W SFX-L unit will be priced at a similar level,” said the expert.
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KitGuru Says: Looks like Silverstone’s new SFX-L 700W PSUs are going to create a small revolution in the market of SFF PCs. Thanks to them, even small chassis can now integrate two top-of-the-range graphics cards. As a result, an ultra-high-end PC for ultra HD gaming can now be as small as an HTPC. Great work, Silverstone!
80 Plus means nothing if the components are garbage. Go to Newegg and read the reviews for Silverstone’s SX600 (SFX 600w). There are numerous complaints there and elsewhere online that these PSUs are blowing up hard disks, are failing, and have noisy fans.
the 450watt golds are good though
I have had my Silverstone SFX 600W power supply since June running a 4690K, GTX980Ti, 2 x SSDs, and an slot load Blu ray optic drive. There have been no issues whatsoever. My guess is that those bad reviews were from folks that got lemon units.
the 500W and the 450W are really good , the reason why the 600W is soo bad its because of the fan ,, the 600W have a 80 mm fan to cool the psu and that’s just wrong , noise level are back and heat is still pretty high , dont forget that sfx psu are in general inside very tight cases. the 500 and the 450w psu have a normal 120 mm fan and its just perfect , i personally have the 500W and did by perpuse to not buy the 600W even if I have the new i7 + asus trix geforce 9700. Anyway , I’m happy to see they are going back to 120 mm fans , I will buy it when it goes out
my 450w gold psu from SST died 2 weeks ago, i am really not enjoying the overall experience of what sst made… yet have to buy from them again!
actually now thinking, it was all a bad choice to order from a brand that is not sold locally… I made amazon.com richer with extra shipping fees and import duties…
First, the RVZ01 case, it has ridiculously long cables inside,
The recommended cooler at their site, at that time, nt06pro is too huge and not good enough with only 1 slim fan on it.
The GPU bracket is not good enough for 16x pCI usage, had to drive it in 8x or the drivers stopped responding.
and anything goes wrong, i have to take out the whole motherboard to find and fix it…
mine lasted 2 years then puf…
yea, they have alot of lemons…