Super Flower Leadex VII PRO 1000W ATX v3.1 PSU Review

Average Noise

The average noise output is high, close to 35 dBA, at 115V, while it gets notably lower at 230V because of the higher efficiency, which leads to lower thermal loads.

Fan Noise & Speed Maps @ 28-32 °C – 115V

If selected, the fan’s passive operation lasts long, restricting the PSU’s noise at light and moderate loads. At higher loads, the fan speed profile gets wild, with the 30 dBA mark passing at 650W at 12V and with two small regions where noise even exceeds 45 dBA. If you keep the combined load on the minor rails below 90W, you won’t have over 45 dBA fan noise. Still, with more than 790W at 12V, you will be treated with over 40 dBA fan noise, which is pretty loud.

Let’s look at the 230V input fan noise and speed maps.

Fan Noise & Speed Maps @ 28-32 °C – 230V

The fan’s passive operation lasts longer at 230V, there is no over 45 dBA noise region, and the 40-45 dBA noise region lasts for much less. All these lead to a notable lower average noise output, at this voltage input level, compared to 115V input.

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12 thoughts on “Super Flower Leadex VII PRO 1000W ATX v3.1 PSU Review

  1. Hello, good afternoon!
    I have a question, does it matter what the connectors are like on the back of the PSU? This specific one use 9-pin connectors that I have never seen in my life, could it cause me problems? Especially with the 12V 2×6 cable?
    In my country I can get one of these, it is at the same price as the MSI MPG A1000G PCIE5, which one is better? (I imagine Superflower).
    Thank you so much!

  2. θα μπορούσατε να μου πείτε από που μπορώ να αγοράσω αυτό το τροφοδοτικό? Προορίζεται για radeon rx 7900xtx και 7800x3d

    1. Δυστυχώς η Super Flower δεν έχει ακόμη distributor στην Ευρώπη. Ρίξε μια ματιά στην Caseking αν το φέρνει.

  3. Hi,

    On page 2 (Box & Bundle, Product Photos & Cables), statement “The modular panel around the back hosts thirteen sockets. Since the PSU doesn’t have a native 12V-2×6 socket, it is automatically ATX v3.1 compliant if it meets the ATX v3.0 requirements.” is confusing to me.

    This statement confuses me because it reads, this PSU is ATX 3.1 compliant since it does not have 12v-2×6 socket.

    1. it means that any PSU that doesn’t have the native 12V-2×6 but uses 2x 8 pin sockets instead AND meets ATX v3.0 spec requirements, automatically meets the ATX v3.1 specs.

      While PSUs with 12VHPWR are NOT since they need the native 12V-2×6. Some brands were smart and used 2x 8 pins (e.g. Corsair, Super Flower) so they didn’t have to make any changes to make their PSUs ATX v3.1 ready.

      1. Hello, could there be an error in the characteristics? What is the correct full-bridge or hall-bridge topology?
        thank you and greetings

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