Gotcha - sorry, just read your original message, and with intelligence borne from hindsight I now totally understand. AT supplies work fine, although you will still need the load on the +5V rail. They probably have a cutout when there is no load to protect the supply. There is also a 'power ok' pin at one end of one of the plugs so that the supply will not start (protecting the supply and the mobo) if the two plugs are reversed when put on a motherboard - just some useless infor for ya.

The voltages are +5V, -5V, +12V and -12V - there is no 3.3V rail on the AT supply... so that is how you got the +7V... +12 and -5V...

Regards

Steve



Ben Devine wrote:

Now i know its an AT psu but i don't need to "Hot-wire" anything apart from turn it on.

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Regards

Steve Dunford
Essential Technology
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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