be quiet! Pure Power 10 600W PSU Review
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Transient Response Tests
Advanced Transient Response Tests
For details on our transient response testing, please click here.
Ιn these tests, we monitor the be-quiet! L10-CM-600's response in several scenarios. First, a transient load (10A at +12V, 5A at 5V, 5A at 3.3V, and 0.5A at 5VSB) is applied for 200ms as the PSU works at 20 percent load. In the second scenario, it's hit by the same transient load while operating at 50 percent load.
In the next sets of tests, we increase the transient load on the major rails with a new configuration: 15A at +12V, 6A at 5V, 6A at 3.3V, and 0.5A at 5VSB. We also increase the load-changing repetition rate from 5 Hz (200ms) to 50 Hz (20ms). Again, this runs with the PSU operating at 20 and 50 percent load.
The last tests are even tougher. Although we keep the same loads, the load-changing repetition rate rises to 1 KHz (1ms).
In all of the tests, we use an oscilloscope to measure the voltage drops caused by the transient load. The voltages should remain within the ATX specification's regulation limits.
These tests are crucial because they simulate the transient loads a PSU is likely to handle (such as booting a RAID array or an instant 100 percent load of CPU/GPUs). We call these "Advanced Transient Response Tests," and they are designed to be very tough to master, especially for a PSU with a capacity of less than 500W.
Advanced Transient Response at 20 Percent – 200ms
Voltage | Before | After | Change | Pass/Fail |
---|---|---|---|---|
12V | 12.136V | 11.986V | 1.24% | Pass |
5V | 5.039V | 4.935V | 2.06% | Pass |
3.3V | 3.354V | 3.225V | 3.85% | Pass |
5VSB | 5.048V | 5.003V | 0.89% | Pass |
Advanced Transient Response at 20 Percent – 20ms
Voltage | Before | After | Change | Pass/Fail |
---|---|---|---|---|
12V | 12.136V | 11.925V | 1.74% | Pass |
5V | 5.040V | 4.893V | 2.92% | Pass |
3.3V | 3.354V | 3.177V | 5.28% | Pass |
5VSB | 5.049V | 4.983V | 1.31% | Pass |
Advanced Transient Response at 20 Percent – 1ms
Voltage | Before | After | Change | Pass/Fail |
---|---|---|---|---|
12V | 12.136V | 12.004V | 1.09% | Pass |
5V | 5.042V | 4.888V | 3.05% | Pass |
3.3V | 3.354V | 3.187V | 4.98% | Pass |
5VSB | 5.049V | 4.991V | 1.15% | Pass |
Advanced Transient Response at 50 Percent – 200ms
Voltage | Before | After | Change | Pass/Fail |
---|---|---|---|---|
12V | 12.105V | 11.952V | 1.26% | Pass |
5V | 5.008V | 4.903V | 2.10% | Pass |
3.3V | 3.326V | 3.185V | 4.24% | Pass |
5VSB | 5.010V | 4.965V | 0.90% | Pass |
Advanced Transient Response at 50 Percent – 20ms
Voltage | Before | After | Change | Pass/Fail |
---|---|---|---|---|
12V | 12.106V | 11.884V | 1.83% | Pass |
5V | 5.011V | 4.895V | 2.31% | Pass |
3.3V | 3.326V | 3.123V | 6.10% | Fail |
5VSB | 5.011V | 4.953V | 1.16% | Pass |
Advanced Transient Response at 50 Percent – 1ms
Voltage | Before | After | Change | Pass/Fail |
---|---|---|---|---|
12V | 12.106V | 11.928V | 1.47% | Pass |
5V | 5.011V | 4.897V | 2.27% | Pass |
3.3V | 3.325V | 3.128V | 5.92% | Fail |
5VSB | 5.011V | 4.948V | 1.26% | Pass |
Comments
Here are the oscilloscope screenshots we took during Advanced Transient Response Testing:
Transient Response At 20 Percent Load – 200ms
Transient Response At 20 Percent Load – 20ms
Transient Response At 20 Percent Load – 1ms
Transient Response At 50 Percent Load – 200ms
Transient Response At 50 Percent Load – 20ms
Transient Response At 50 Percent Load – 1ms
Turn-On Transient Tests
In the next set of tests, we measured the L10-CM-600's response in simpler transient load scenarios—during its power-on phase.
For the first measurement, we turned the L10-CM-600 off, dialed in the maximum current the 5VSB could output and switched the PSU back on. In the second test, we dialed the maximum load the +12V rail could handle and started the 600W supply while it was in standby mode. In the last test, while the PSU was completely switched off (we cut off the power or switched off the PSU by flipping its on/off switch), we dialed the maximum load the +12V rail could handle before switching it back on from the loader and restoring the power. The ATX specification states that recorded spikes on all rails should not exceed 10 percent of their nominal values (+10 percent for 12V is 13.2V, and 5.5 V for 5V).
At +12V both slopes look good. This doesn't apply to the 5VSB rail where the voltage overshoot is notable (but still below the 5.5V limit).
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Aris Mpitziopoulos is a contributing editor at Tom's Hardware, covering PSUs.
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sunny420 This one looks like a pass. Much better units out there. Too bad, I wish the best for BeQuiet!Reply
Another review:
https://www.hardocp.com/article/2017/06/27/be_quiet_pure_power_10_600w_supply_review -
HERETIC-1 For not too many $ more you can get a Seasonic G series.Reply
With quality components-better design-better performance,
and to top it off a longer warranty................................
PSU IS THE MOST IMPORTANT PART OF ANY BUILD.
Avoid these low end PSU's......................