> > Even my rig - hotter, doesn't reach 300W when I artificially torture the
> > system. Normal 'max' load is in 200W range. An normal desktop? Under 100.
> >
>
> OK -- just to find out the truth I've attached a kill-a-watt to my current
> workstation which is ~4yrs old w/ slow cpu and ancient video card but
> has been upgraded w/ 7 SATA Drives:
>

So the figures below are AC in, not DC out. Pretty sure the figure everyone
uses for comparison is DC out.


> Idle - ~285W
> Light Use (emerge --sync) - ~310W
> Kernel Compile w/ video app running and minor torture- ~340W
>
> This is definitely much higher than 100-200W stated above.
>
> Anyhow, given that the discussion was about a system lasting ~8yrs, which
> is
> twice the current age of my system, I don't think it's unfeasible that
> future
> upgrades (especially if video card related or if moving cpu from 2 core to
> 8
> core) could get normal power util 20% higher to ~372W eventually.
>
> If you conservatively state that PSU wattage should be 1.66 * normal util
>  (so
> that PSU is normally running at 60% of peak) then:
>
> 1.66 * 372 = 617
>

I think you've double dipped there....see above comment.

My 2c WRT power supplies - buy a quality brand as they are one of the least
reliable components in a PC.

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