Cables and Connectors


All of the cable harnesses are sleeved with black mesh. FSP uses a different color marking on the 12V cables, which is good when you're trying to determine what goes where. They have yellow cables with green, blue, or orange marking to differentiate the 12V rails. This not only makes the life of a reviewer easier, but it also helps end users who will be able to select connectors to balance the load on the rails. Unfortunately, compared to competing PSUs the Epsilon 600W doesn't have as many connectors.

The choice of graphics cards is limited by the two PCI Express connectors with 6-pins and 6/8-pins. You can still run a moderate SLI/CrossFire setup, but you are limited to cards that only need one 6-pin connector. Alternately, you can run a larger card with two 6-pin or 6-pin and 8-pin connectors. Beside the PEG connections, the Epsilon 600 has each six Molex and SATA connectors on a total of four harnesses, with one harness that also carries the single Floppy connector.


The Fan


The 120mm ball-bearing fan made by Yate Loon seems to be a good choice in regards to noise. Many users buy fans from Yate Loon for their systems to reduce noise levels, and they are well respected. This fan carries the part number D12BH-12.

Package and Appearance Internals
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  • Amart - Wednesday, August 6, 2008 - link

    -1

    FSP Epsilon above 500W are known to have Ripple/Noise problems, and the "spec" for maximum is much higher then anyone would want to buy.

    Capacitors age, and Ripple/Noise increases over the lifetime of this product - so starting out very-low is a requirement for a quality unit. I've seen plenty of tests of $80+ units that failed to provide the quality they promised.
  • C'DaleRider - Wednesday, August 6, 2008 - link

    Fucktard? My, my, little boy games calling names....makes you such a big boy, doesn't it?

    I guess despite the education proper testing sites have attempted to do in testing power supplies has eluded you. Ripple and noise is quite important...but since you care not for ever seeing the values presented, and it's not hard to get them, AT's vaunted Chroma gives them so why cannot they be presented is beyond me.

    And to show the ripple/noise graphing is very simple, too. An oscilloscope is all that's needed....and if a website can afford a Chroma, it certainly can afford an oscilloscope.

    Without proper presentation of ripple/noise generation at given output levels, their testing is incomplete. To be within spec is rather meaningless as 115mV of ripple on the +12V rail at full rated output is within spec, but I wouldn't buy a power supply that produced that much ripple/noise.

    Come on AT, get with the program and show us complete information, or is HardOCP, Hardware Secrets, and JonnyGuru's sites the only ones that will do proper testing and leave you as an also-ran testing site.
  • strikeback03 - Wednesday, August 6, 2008 - link

    If you don't trust them to say "Ripple Results are fine" then why would you trust a graphic? Never heard of Photoshop? Or use Labview to generate a signal to be read by an oscilloscope? If a reviewer actually wants to deceive, a picture isn't any harder.
  • JarredWalton - Wednesday, August 6, 2008 - link

    That's pretty much my thoughts as well. Christoph did include ripple tests and charts in some previous articles (http://www.anandtech.com/casecoolingpsus/showdoc.a...">for example, this roundup), but didn't feel like the amount of time required to generate all the charts really added anything to the results. Given that he HAS done those tests in the past, I see no reason to think that he's not conducting those tests now. That he condenses a bunch of charts that take a significant amount of effort to create into a short statement on ripple doesn't really bother me at all. Though I do have to say, at least reporting the mV ripple values as he's done in the past would be good.
  • Amart - Thursday, August 7, 2008 - link

    He does NOT condense. If he wanted to condense he would give the average number he's getting from the calculation.

    Simply saying that something is "within spec" is unacceptable in a professional review, for reasons outlined in the above replies.

    He must show the numbers, whether in a graph or simply writing them down. It won't take more space or time - if he's actually doing the testing.
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, August 7, 2008 - link

    Usually Christoph has listed the ripple values. I'm not sure why he didn't put them in this article. Compare to the last article, where he mentions 8mV or whatever. I'll flog him and make sure we get some numbers for future PSUs. :)
  • Amart - Friday, August 8, 2008 - link

    Why not for this one? This isn't paper print, you can edit.

    Both methodology and results for such key testing should be posted or linked within the article - just like on other sites.
  • HOOfan 1 - Thursday, August 7, 2008 - link

    I personally would rather see specific values for ripple rather than oscilloscope shots. By the same measure, I would rather see specific values for voltage regulation, rather than line graph. I would rather see specific AC input versus DC output numbers instead of a line graph for efficiency. All of these should be simple and quick to whip up into a chart. As for the FSP Epsilon, for most in North America where the superior Corsair CWT and Seasonic designs can be had for the same price or even less money, I say going with the superior designs of CWT and Seasonic is a no brainer. Same for the new BFG LS line that has popped up...they need to drop the price by about $15-$20 before they can even hope to compete with the value that Corsair is putting out there.
  • larson0699 - Wednesday, August 6, 2008 - link

    I'll take their word for it..

    ..especially having already concluded that this is a good unit but still nothing on Seasonic's S12II/M12II line. Their testing is sufficient to validate that.

    You can say what you want about AT, but it's their game and I think they're damn good at it, and ooh look at the pretty colors *drool*. You may find yourself more comfortable reading , Hot, Tom's, I don't care, but that's _your_ preference and one I can respect, at least moreso than "boo fuckity hoo your testing is incomplete OMGWTFBBQ". I'll tell you what'll really get results: Buy the unit, suppress the mouth.

    I said good day.

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