Average Noise
This looks to be a passive PSU rather than one with active cooling! At 1035W, the fan speed is within the 600-800 RPM range. How do all these translate to noise output? At up to 1050W, the PSU’s noise is below 6 dBA; from 1050 to 1200W, it remains below 10 dBA. With 1200W and higher loads, the fan’s noise is within the 10-15 dBA range.
Fan Noise & Speed Maps @ 28-32 °C – 115V
The fan starts to spin at around 610W load, at 12V, and the load on the minor rails doesn’t seem to affect the fan speed profile.
Fan Noise & Speed Maps @ 28-32 °C – 230V
As expected, the thermal loads are notably lower at 230V, so the fan speed profile can be even more relaxed. Up to 1230W at 12V, noise remains below 6 dBA, and it never exceeds 10 dBA at higher loads.
Pages:
“A lower ripple at 12V under full load would be highly welcome, but I want a better transient response on this rail at high loads. To achieve this, more capacitance is required, and polymer caps don’t cut it there, so you need to use electrolytic ones, which are not as tolerant to high temperatures. Given that CM wants to keep the fan’s speed low, this could lead to problems. This is a design challenge that CM’s engineers have to handle.”
Why does CM have to do this? Perhaps you should demand that the standards be more strict, as this unit meets them, correct? If the transient response fails the standard then I can understand the demand. Otherwise, it’s an aspiration until some other company comes out with a PSU that is this quiet with this high a wattage.
I don’t agree with the warranty criticism. It is stated definitively without proof:
“Such a long warranty period will eventually create problems for both the brand and consumers”
Will? How about “might”? It’s actually refreshing to see a company stand behind their product. 15 years is not an unreasonable lifespan for a PSU.
The price of $459 MSRP (inc. VAT) is just too much for most PC builders; at least the Cooler Master X Silent MAX Platinum 1300 has a 6% deviation in 200% load ATX v3.1 transient response tests. Unfortunately, the transient response is not good at 120/160/180% load tests, and the ripple suppression is not very impressive on the 12V rail (full/100% load), especially when considering the high price.
On the other hand, the XPG CyberCore II 1300 and Seasonic Prime TX-1300 are still the best-performing 1300W PSUs in the ATX v3.1 transient response test (200% load) on the 12V rail.
The problem with the Seasonic Prime TX-1300 (€ 425) is its ridicolous price in the EU when compared to the XPG CyberCore II 1300 (€ 230).
Not my choice for a 1300W PSU.
Silence costs money.
In this price range one can get a seasonic 1000-1300W model and never look back.
Disagree with Seasonic. In 2021-2022 i remember quiet a few articles on techpowerup, tom’s hardware, reddit etc about issues with their PSU (and bad warranty service). Be careful with these brands like Noctua promising eternity* We have seen recently Asus, EK…
Seasonic prime is the only power supply I’ve had problems with, first it would turn on occasionally then it even stopped turning on. And I’m not the only one. The CWT platforms are much more reliable
This coolermaster psu is an excellent unit. You would be silly to not give it a solid consideration when it comes time to purchase.
You’re kidding me for $459 MSRP?
Not affordable
Protection features need tuning for larger differences in the triggering points (12V OCP & OPP) between hot and cold conditions
12V rail’s transient response needs to get better in ATX v3.1 test scenarios
Efficiency needs boosting at light loads
The 3.3V rail needs tighter load regulation
Increased vampire power
Ideally, it should have an IEC C20 input/socket
Such an extended warranty period will eventually create problems for both the brand and consumers
It seems reasonable to me, considering how quiet it is and because the warranty is so long.
I’d rather pay more for quality versus less for something that won’t last as long and which increases noise pollution.