Antec NeoHE "High-Efficiency"
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Antec NeoHE "High-Efficiency"
http://www.antec.com/us/pro_p_NeoHE.html
- Up to 85% claimed efficiency
- Single 80mm fan exhaust, claimed 18dBA (har har... we shall see). We can safely assume large internal heatsinks
- Modular like the Neopower
- APFC for all models
- Three +12V outputs, very lean +5V and +3.3V outputs
- Typical Antec 3% voltage regulation
- Rated at 50°C continuous
I am most interested. This PSU looks like it's begging for an SPCR review!
The NeoHE 430 has been reviewed by SPCR, with postscripts and addendums included.
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edit: I figured that this thread has grown long enough to warrant some summary or at least a direct link to any significant posts, especially those by AntecRep.
18/11/2005: http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewto ... 630#224630
20/03/2006: http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewto ... 179#253179
08/05/2006: http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewto ... 368#264368
For the most part, Antec seems to have fixed most of the NeoHE problems ("incompatibilities") that we saw in late-2005. It is now September 2006 (almost a year later), and I think it is safe to assume that the NeoHEs at a high-turnover retailer should be of a good revision. It's still a great PSU on paper, it just had some teething issues. Antec has also increased their warranty period to a full five years, which is quite nice.
- Up to 85% claimed efficiency
- Single 80mm fan exhaust, claimed 18dBA (har har... we shall see). We can safely assume large internal heatsinks
- Modular like the Neopower
- APFC for all models
- Three +12V outputs, very lean +5V and +3.3V outputs
- Typical Antec 3% voltage regulation
- Rated at 50°C continuous
I am most interested. This PSU looks like it's begging for an SPCR review!
The NeoHE 430 has been reviewed by SPCR, with postscripts and addendums included.
______________________________________________________________________________
edit: I figured that this thread has grown long enough to warrant some summary or at least a direct link to any significant posts, especially those by AntecRep.
18/11/2005: http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewto ... 630#224630
20/03/2006: http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewto ... 179#253179
08/05/2006: http://forums.silentpcreview.com/viewto ... 368#264368
For the most part, Antec seems to have fixed most of the NeoHE problems ("incompatibilities") that we saw in late-2005. It is now September 2006 (almost a year later), and I think it is safe to assume that the NeoHEs at a high-turnover retailer should be of a good revision. It's still a great PSU on paper, it just had some teething issues. Antec has also increased their warranty period to a full five years, which is quite nice.
Last edited by KorruptioN on Sun Sep 10, 2006 8:41 am, edited 3 times in total.
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*picks jaw up off floor*
Looks amazing on paper. Nice to see three +12V (CPU, motherboard/peripherals, and VGA, I'd assume?). And I can't think of any other manufacturers off the top of my head that rate a power supply at 50*C other than PCP&C. I don't think even OCZ can claim that (IIRC they rate at 40*C).
Can't wait to see SPCR's review of this with the updated PSU review system.
Looks amazing on paper. Nice to see three +12V (CPU, motherboard/peripherals, and VGA, I'd assume?). And I can't think of any other manufacturers off the top of my head that rate a power supply at 50*C other than PCP&C. I don't think even OCZ can claim that (IIRC they rate at 40*C).
Can't wait to see SPCR's review of this with the updated PSU review system.
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Looks like it would work nicely in a P180 case - can't see if it has vents on the bottom, but it has a nice open grille on the front/back (the face that the wires come out of!), and a single low-speed fan on the back/front (the face that the AC power goes into).
Modular cables could be a bonus in the P180 (assuming that they are long enough).
Interesting. Hope it gets run through the SPCR mill soon
Modular cables could be a bonus in the P180 (assuming that they are long enough).
Interesting. Hope it gets run through the SPCR mill soon
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No vents in the bottom, only five 1/8" x 1" slots on the side.PositiveSpin wrote:Looks like it would work nicely in a P180 case - can't see if it has vents on the bottom
The modular cables are very cool. The ATX cable is a tad over 21" long.PositiveSpin wrote:Modular cables could be a bonus in the P180 (assuming that they are long enough).
The fan is quite nice, although my calibrated ears would put it closer to the low 20dBA range than 18dBA. It's real smooth sounding, no rattles, chattering or anything else like bearing noise. It's sound is quite easy to live with.
That's all I can tell you though. I don't do the PSU testing around here, and don't know if/when the guys up in the Frozen North might be doing this one. I suppose you'll just have to be patient.
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We have no plans to review the TruePower 2.0 (contrary to what everyone seems to assume). Seems that Ralf has already revealed that there's Neo HE in the works though ... keep your eyes open.Krazy Kommando wrote:cant wait for the review for this and the truepower 2.0 (which im assuming will happen eventually?)
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Nope, all I said was:Devonavar wrote:Seems that Ralf has already revealed that there's Neo HE in the works though ... keep your eyes open.Krazy Kommando wrote:cant wait for the review for this and the truepower 2.0 (which im assuming will happen eventually?)
...because I don't have any idea what's up, up there.Ralfie wrote:and don't know if/when the guys up in the Frozen North might be doing this one. I suppose you'll just have to be patient.
Sold!
A Neo HE 500 with three 17A 12V rails sounds a bit like overkill but dual-cores, 4 hard drives, video cards, TV tuner cards, fans and whatever else I can think of will be easily fed.
Tried to get a Seasonic 430W refurb but they were sold out. Maybe this was an omen so I look forward to SPCR's world class review!
A Neo HE 500 with three 17A 12V rails sounds a bit like overkill but dual-cores, 4 hard drives, video cards, TV tuner cards, fans and whatever else I can think of will be easily fed.
Tried to get a Seasonic 430W refurb but they were sold out. Maybe this was an omen so I look forward to SPCR's world class review!
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If the 500w sounds like overkill then pick up the 380w. It has three +12V rails at 15A, which should be more than enough for most systems out there.
Also keep in mind that these power supplies are rated at 50*C. Under less stressful conditions, actual output would probably be much higher (maybe as much as 450w if you used it in a P180, for example, where it is getting relatively cool air).
EDIT: Looking at the numbers more closely, and something just doesn't add up. The +12V ratings must be at a more standard ambient temperature (maybe 25*C?), or they're peak ratings at 50*C. Assuming +12V continuous is 15A per rail, that's 540w, which is not at all in line with 380w continuous at 50*C output rating.
Also keep in mind that these power supplies are rated at 50*C. Under less stressful conditions, actual output would probably be much higher (maybe as much as 450w if you used it in a P180, for example, where it is getting relatively cool air).
EDIT: Looking at the numbers more closely, and something just doesn't add up. The +12V ratings must be at a more standard ambient temperature (maybe 25*C?), or they're peak ratings at 50*C. Assuming +12V continuous is 15A per rail, that's 540w, which is not at all in line with 380w continuous at 50*C output rating.
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I looked at the specs of the Neo HE 500 with the three 17A 12V rails. Antec bracketed the three rails and put a rating of 456 watts across all the rails. That calculates to 38 amps instead of 51 so it must be the max draw per rail.
Still, 38 amps of 12V should feed my computer and I might be able to jump a car with it.
Still, 38 amps of 12V should feed my computer and I might be able to jump a car with it.
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Your've got 38A right, but it's actually less than that.Kwiet wrote:I looked at the specs of the Neo HE 500 with the three 17A 12V rails. Antec bracketed the three rails and put a rating of 456 watts across all the rails. That calculates to 38 amps instead of 51 so it must be the max draw per rail.
Still, 38 amps of 12V should feed my computer and I might be able to jump a car with it.
The combined ratings are the most important -- they tell you what the PSU can produce simultaneously.
The max rated output for the 500W model is 500W. But if you add up 456W to the other outputs on the same row in that table --- 75.9W + 85W + 456W + 9.6W + 12.5W -- you get 639W, which is too much. The unit is only rated to 500W max output.
So...
The 80 Plus and Intel power load testing scheme (which we use) assumes that the maximum +5VSB and -12V line rated power is needed. So subtract 9.6W + 12.5W from 500W, and you get 477.9W.
Now look at 639W, and subtract 9.6W + 12.5W from that as well. You get 616.9W.
This means the ratio of 456 / 616.9 is the same as X / 477.9. Solve for X, you get 353W or 29.44A on the 12V line.
This would be our target 12V load for full power output on the PSU tester.
FYI, the total 12V load we used to get 425W output on the HE 430 model was ~25.5A.
Holy cow!!! I'm in shock that there's an Antec PSU I would actually want/recommend for once. I've been sad about how far behind Seasonic PSU's they were, but this totally makes up for everything. I'm really hoping the fan itself is very quiet because that combined with modular cabling, active pdf, high efficiency, and hopefully a decent price would make this an easy buy...especially since Antec is well distributed in stores. Looks like seasonic's finally got a challenger
I'm also hoping this means Antec will come out with some cases that include the psu someday so I have something I can recommend to people who are skittish about buying a case and psu seperately.
I'm also hoping this means Antec will come out with some cases that include the psu someday so I have something I can recommend to people who are skittish about buying a case and psu seperately.
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The Antec P150 comes bundled with a Neo HE430. We're in the middle of preparing reviews of both.merlin wrote:I'm also hoping this means Antec will come out with some cases that include the psu someday so I have something I can recommend to people who are skittish about buying a case and psu seperately.
I just found that press release a while ago too. I'm surprised the p series has a bundled psu for the first time, but the quality of psu will finally match the quality of the case. The only major issue is $179 is going to cause some sticker shock for people are used to paying under $100. Ah well, you get what you pay for. (now to convince others of that fact...)The Antec P150 comes bundled with a Neo HE430. We're in the middle of preparing reviews of both.
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holy crapola.
its the cheaper version of my phantom 350 with a constant fan.
i duno why they didnt make this before! just 2% less claim than my psu in efficiency.
This sounds like the ultimate linux box or new system solution.
i hated the 180. no offense mikeC!! it's just unreasonably large, complex and expensive (remember, the 180 has no psu for its price) for a community that hardly has anything more than 1 quiet hd, 1 combo silent dvd drive and a single gfx card build.
its the cheaper version of my phantom 350 with a constant fan.
i duno why they didnt make this before! just 2% less claim than my psu in efficiency.
This sounds like the ultimate linux box or new system solution.
i hated the 180. no offense mikeC!! it's just unreasonably large, complex and expensive (remember, the 180 has no psu for its price) for a community that hardly has anything more than 1 quiet hd, 1 combo silent dvd drive and a single gfx card build.
P180
I had a problem with my 4 pin connector TO SHORT fixed it by barrowing from a dead PSU the plug and wire I needed to lengthen the power cable about a foot this would have allowed me to run it behind the MOB.Live wrote:Review them all!!
PSUs for the P180 seems to be a problem for many. I know it is for me.
AS for mounting the PSU mine has a 90mm on the bottom with is now the top and a 90mm in the back. It is an oddball PSU (Allied 450W) I like to pick up all my part locally.
So does this mean that none of these well be able to meet Nvidia SLI spec which I believe is 32 amps on the 12v lines for 7800 cards? I’m sad to admit that your calculations are way out of my leagueMikeC wrote:The 80 Plus and Intel power load testing scheme (which we use) assumes that the maximum +5VSB and -12V line rated power is needed. So subtract 9.6W + 12.5W from 500W, and you get 477.9W.
Now look at 639W, and subtract 9.6W + 12.5W from that as well. You get 616.9W.
This means the ratio of 456 / 616.9 is the same as X / 477.9. Solve for X, you get 353W or 29.44A on the 12V line.
This would be our target 12V load for full power output on the PSU tester.
FYI, the total 12V load we used to get 425W output on the HE 430 model was ~25.5A.
But let’s say compared to the S12 600, which is certified for SLI, how many ampere does that have on the 12v line for comparisons sake?
As for modifying the PSU myself I would not know how to do it even if I wanted too. The PSU I am looking for is for a new setup and I value the contents high enough to not want to run them of a modified PSU. Especially considering I have close to zero knowledge about electronics or whatever you need to be knowledgeable about to do such a thing. See I don’t even know what exactly I am supposed to knowI had a problem with my 4 pin connector TO SHORT Sad fixed it by barrowing from a dead PSU Smile the plug and wire I needed to lengthen the power cable about a foot this would have allowed me to run it behind the MOB.