activated1
Moderator
- Učlanjen(a)
- 01.04.2009.
- Poruka
- 4.583
- Rezultat reagovanja
- 10
Moja konfiguracija
PC / Laptop Name:
a1-PC
CPU & cooler:
AMD FX 8300 @ 3.3GHz / Thermalright Ultra-120A
Motherboard:
ASUS M5A99X EVO
RAM:
4x4GB Kingston HyperX Genesis
VGA & cooler:
ZOTAC GTX1060 6GB / ASUS R9270X-DC2T-2GD5
Display:
BenQ 2450
HDD:
SP/Samsung 120GB SSD Raid-0, 4x Toshiba 1TB Raid-0, Toshiba 2TB
Sound:
Integrated - S/PDIF @ Yamaha RX-V 659
Case:
Corsair Obsidian 750D
PSU:
Corsair RM1000i
Optical drives:
/
Mice & keyboard:
Logitech UltraX & Razer Copperhead (thanks to Lukija)
Internet:
Telekom VDSL 20Mbps/4Mbps
OS & Browser:
Windows 10 x64
Other:
Xiaomi Redmi 5 Plus/HTC One M7 32GB/HTC EVO 3D + 8gb microSD/Sony Ericsson X1
- Urednik
- #1
Buying a budget PSU can be something of a minefield. Many of us don't want to spend a fortune on a PC, but at the same time we don't want to be lumbered with some unreliable bit of kit dishing out sketchy power to your beloved hardware. Corsair has already made a video showing really what we already know about cheap PSUs: at best they aren't worth the money, and at worse they are potentially dangerous.
Corsair has chiselled out a great reputation for build quality, even though it has no expressed manufacturing itself, it employs quality manufacturers like CWT or Seasonic, with tweaks and elements of its own design to make its own PSUs unique. The CX400W represents the most inexpensive of Corsair's line-up for really cheap PCs, however we were keen to find out if Corsair has broken its own rules, or it really has made a solid foundation to a bargain build.
Review