be quiet! Pure Power 13 M 750W ATX v3.1 PSU Review

Hold Up Time

The hold-up time is close to 19 ms, and the power OK signal is accurate.

Inrush Current

The inrush current is a bit high at 115V but low at 230V.

Leakage Current

Leakage current refers to the small amount of current that flows through an insulating material or a semiconductor device when it is ideally supposed to be non-conductive. It is typically seen in electronics, such as transistors, capacitors, and insulators, where the current leaks due to imperfections or unintended pathways, even when the device is “off.”

Leakage current in power circuits is an alternating current flowing through the earthing conductor caused mainly by the EMC filter’s Y capacitors (Cy). The more Y capacitors, the higher the leakage current can be!

The IEC 62368-1, which replaces the IEC 60950 OFF (Office Equipment) and IEC 60065 TRON (Electronics, entertainment), defines the limits for maximum leakage (touch) current.

  • Normal Condition: Maximum touch current = 3.5 mA
  • Single Fault Condition: Maximum touch current = 10 mA

The leakage current is low.

Timings

The PSU supports Alternative Low Power Modes.

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10 thoughts on “be quiet! Pure Power 13 M 750W ATX v3.1 PSU Review

  1. Interesting that this 750w version of the Be Quiet Pure Power 13m has much high in-rush current than the shown in the 650w PSU review. 71.5A versus 25.68A .

  2. I have a be quiet! Pure Power 13 M 750W. According to the specs, it has semi-passive Zero-RPM cooling, so the fan stops at low load and spins up only when needed.

    My system: RTX 5060 Ti + i7-8700.
    I tested with FurMark + Prime95 for 5 minutes, GPU at 100%, CPU fully loaded.
    Total system power draw should be around 250–300W.

    The fan still didn’t spin, and when I touched the PSU afterwards, it was cool to the touch.

    My concern:

    I expected the fan to start under such load.

    I was worried the fan might be faulty.

    But since the PSU stays cool even under stress, it seems the fan only kicks in at higher temperature thresholds, not just based on wattage.

  3. Hello,

    I’m reaching out regarding your review of the Be quiet! PURE POWER 13M 650W power supply. I own this unit and have noticed a strong chemical or plastic-like odor during normal operation, especially under load.

    I’ve already contacted the manufacturer, and they suggested I return the unit for inspection. However, I’m hesitant to do so, as I’m concerned the issue might be considered “normal” and the warranty claim could be rejected.

    That’s why I’d like to ask: Did you notice any unusual smell from the unit during your testing? Or have you encountered similar behavior with other Be quiet! power supplies?

    Your feedback would be very helpful in deciding how to proceed. I really appreciate the work you do — your reviews are always a valuable resource.

    Best regards,

  4. What would you recommend between an XPG Core Reactor II, be quiet! Pure Power 13M and Corsair RMx (ATX3.1)??? All 750W

    Prices XPG < be quiet! < Corsair

  5. I’m not clear on some classifications here.
    We know that BQ goes for system power, then pure power, power zone, straight power, dark power.
    Wasn’t it compared in the class, for example, straight power with corsair rmx, or seasonic focus gx, and corsair hx or axi with prime series seasonica, dark power is probably there somewhere.Now you say that you compare pure power with rmx, skipping the power zone. Either rmx fell, or pp13 jumped with production, I compared them more with RMe. So I ranked the nrp cwt platform that is used by a large number of brands with seasonic gx, straight power, cors rmx,fsp hydro ptm…

      1. Do not compare them by price, but by class, and the same or similar quality. And customers will judge for themselves based on their market what is the best solution for them.

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