Entry level is Deer, PowMax, Allied and the such. I'd at least say mid level like Thermaltake, AOpen, Enlight, etc. You don't get "continuous power" and 34A 12V rails on entry level power supplies. Also, I'd move OCZ over with Antec and Enermax on your list and leave PCP&C out there by itself. I can't even believe you're trying to make a comparison there.
Originally posted by: Gamingphreek
One thing that i think really stinks about it is all the rails are driven off of one line. Mid Range PSU (Antec, Enermax) have at least two seperate lines, High End PSU's (OCZ and PCP&C) have a line for each and every single cable.
Multiple cables that all lead to the same spot on the PSU's circuit board and move current through circuitry that has a lower overall amperage capability than the wires themselves. Good point there. :roll: Ever wonder why a motherboard has multiple interfaces for voltage? Because traces have more resistance than wires, so multiple traces and connectors closer to their destination provide better power. That's why six layer PCB's was always a big deal when the first Athlons and then the first Opteron's came out. Thinner layers = thinner traces = more resistance. Fortunately, traces in a power supply are wider and thicker in guage and are shorter in length than those on a motherboard, so the power delivery to the wires is pretty accurate.
Your typical 14AWG (I believe that what the power supply is using) wire is capable of 2400A at 12V if your cable is 2 feet long (longer than most power supply wiring.) So I think you're safe.
Besides, ever put a file server case together? The old school variety came with one single four wire lead that ran down the back of all of the drives. Even if you only had a four drive RAID5, you could easily be pulling 60W on startup on that single wire. Not a problem, right? The newer cases, like a SuperMicro with hot swappable drives in the front and a single backplane interface, supports ALL EIGHT DRIVES on a single power connector! That's potentially 120W on startup on a single power connector that's going to be even LESS capable due to the added resistance of the Molex connector and the traces of the backplane card!