15 Nov 2015 at 13:05 #1 Shrapnel Shrapnel Associate Joined 18 Oct 2002 Posts 724 Location Southampton Hi All, As the title says, will my old corsair tx650 work with a new GigaByte GA-Z97-D3H? It's the 8 pin power supply and power rating I'm concerned with. Thanks.
Hi All, As the title says, will my old corsair tx650 work with a new GigaByte GA-Z97-D3H? It's the 8 pin power supply and power rating I'm concerned with. Thanks.
15 Nov 2015 at 13:39 #2 Shrapnel Shrapnel Associate OP Joined 18 Oct 2002 Posts 724 Location Southampton Mine is the original version of the power supply (about 6 or 7 years old) not the later V2 if it makes a difference. Thanks in Advance.
Mine is the original version of the power supply (about 6 or 7 years old) not the later V2 if it makes a difference. Thanks in Advance.
15 Nov 2015 at 13:39 #3 ExRayTed ExRayTed Soldato Joined 18 Oct 2002 Posts 7,782 Location Surrey Shrapnel said: Hi All, As the title says, will my old corsair tx650 work with a new GigaByte GA-Z97-D3H? It's the 8 pin power supply and power rating I'm concerned with. Thanks. Click to expand... It will easily cope. 54 amps / 648 watts available on the 12v rail.
Shrapnel said: Hi All, As the title says, will my old corsair tx650 work with a new GigaByte GA-Z97-D3H? It's the 8 pin power supply and power rating I'm concerned with. Thanks. Click to expand... It will easily cope. 54 amps / 648 watts available on the 12v rail.
15 Nov 2015 at 20:51 #4 Shrapnel Shrapnel Associate OP Joined 18 Oct 2002 Posts 724 Location Southampton Thanks very much. Even if it's only got a 4 pin, not an 8 pin mobo connector? I'm hoping to overclock (a 4690k). I will only have 1 gfx card. Thanks
Thanks very much. Even if it's only got a 4 pin, not an 8 pin mobo connector? I'm hoping to overclock (a 4690k). I will only have 1 gfx card. Thanks
15 Nov 2015 at 20:53 #5 RJC RJC Don Joined 29 May 2005 Posts 29,087 Location Kent You should have a 8 pin CPU power connector with that PSU. http://www.silentpcreview.com/article813-page2.html
You should have a 8 pin CPU power connector with that PSU. http://www.silentpcreview.com/article813-page2.html