|
|
|

|
|
|
Detail Information
|
|
|
Additional inside cooling
fan to ensure the highest performance |
 |
 |
| Two-way
Fan Speed Control of Power Supply |
|
|
There are two ways to control
the fan speed of power supply (in Front and Rear) |
 |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
Fan Speed Control in Rear:
PCI card slot
|
 |
|
Fan Speed Control in Front:
5.25" Drive Bay
|
|
 |
 |
|
|
 |
|
Xaser Badge on Side Panel
(Black/ Silver Printing)
|
|
Package View

|
 |
 |
|
OUTPUT
|
INPUT
|
|
|
+5V
|
-5V
|
+12V
|
-12V
|
+3.3V
|
+5VSB
|
Input Voltage Range
|
100 240 Vrms
|
|
Max.
Load
|
40A
|
0.3A
|
18A
|
0.8A
|
30A
|
2A
|
Input Frequency Range
|
47 - 63 Hz
|
|
Min.
Load
|
1.5A
|
0A
|
0.2A
|
0A
|
0.3A
|
0A
|
Input Current
|
8.0A
|
|
Load
Reg.
|
+5% ~ -5%
|
+10% ~ -10%
|
+5% ~ -5%
|
+10% ~ -10%
|
+5% ~ -5%
|
+5% ~ -5%
|
Hold-up Time
|
> 16ms at Full Load
|
|
Ripple
V(p-p)
|
50mV
|
100mV
|
120mV
|
120mV
|
50mV
|
50mV
|
Efficiency
|
> 65%
|
|
 |
 |
| Advanced
Temperature Control Technology |
|
|
In additional to the Active PFC, Silent Purepower
480W power supply unit is also equipped with advanced
Temperature Control Technology. This enables the
power supply unit to operate at its maximum capability
while keeping the noise level down to an impressive
17dBA during normal operation.
Additionally, Manual Fan Speed Control gives the
user ability to take control of Silent Purepower
(It still works without connecting fan speed controller).
Following RPM v. Temperature graph illustrates the
RPM curve in corresponding to unit enclosure temperature.
Red curve (Graph 1) indicates the speed that the
fan operates at during Automatic Temperature Control.
To ensure proper cooling, Silent Purepower 480W
regulates the range of fan speed that user can manually
adjust. i.e. at 40?C, user can manually adjust the
speed within the range of 1125 RPM to 3125 RPM.
|
|
|
Serial ATA In recent years,
two alternative serial interface technologies - Universal
Serial Bus (USB) and IEEE 1394 - have been proposed
as possible replacements for the Parallel ATA interface.
However, neither interface has been able to offer
the combination of low cost and high performance that
has been the key to success of the traditional Parallel
ATA interface. However, in spite of its success, the
Parallel ATA interface has a long history of design
issues. Most of these issues have been successfully
overcome or worked around. However, some have persisted,
and in 1999 the Serial ATA Working Group - comprising
companies including APT Technologies, Dell, IBM, Intel,
Maxtor, Quantum, and Seagate Technologies - was formed
to begin work on a Serial Advanced Technology Attachment
(ATA) storage interface for hard-disk drives and ATA
Packet Interface (ATAPI) devices that is expected
to replace the current Parallel ATA interface.
Compared with Parallel ATA, Serial ATA will have
lower signalling voltages and reduced pin count,
will be faster and more robust, and will have a
much smaller cable. It will also be completely software
compatible with Parallel ATA and provide backward
compatibility for legacy Parallel ATA and ATAPI
devices. This will be achieved either using chip
sets that support Parallel ATA devices in conjunction
with discrete components that support Serial ATA
devices, or by the use of serial and parallel dongles,
which adapt parallel devices to a serial controller
or adapt serial devices to a parallel controller.
|
| Serial ATA's primary benefits
over Parallel ATA include:
Reductions
in voltage and pin count: Serial ATA's low-voltage
requirement (500 mV peak-to-peak) will effectively
alleviate the increasingly difficult-to-accommodate
5-volt signaling requirement that hampers the current
Parallel ATA interface.
Smaller,
easier-to-route cables: Elimination of the cable-length
limitation: The Serial ATA architecture replaces
the wide Parallel ATA ribbon cable with a thin,
flexible cable that can be up to 1 meter in length.
The serial cable is smaller and easier to route
inside a PC's chassis and eliminates the need for
the large and cumbersome 40-pin connectors required
by Parallel ATA. The small-diameter cable also helps
improve air flow inside the PC system chassis and
will facilitate future designs of smaller PC systems.
Improved
data robustness: Serial ATA will offer more thorough
error checking and error correcting capabilities
than are currently available with Parallel ATA.
The end-to-end integrity of transferred commands
and data can be guaranteed across the serial bus.
First-generation Serial ATA is expected to ship
in 2001 with support for data transfer rates of
up to 150 MBps. Subsequent versions of the specification
are expected to increase performance to support
data transfer rates of 300 MBps and, later, 600
MBps.
|
Detail
Specifications |
|
P/N
|
W0010
|
W0011
|
Fan
|
| Dual Fan: |
1. 8025mm, Two Ball Bearing,
Temp. Auto Control
1300 rpm at 25C ~
4800 rpm at 90C |
| 2. 8015mm, Ball Bearing, 2400rpm |
|
|
Maximum Power
|
480 Watts
|
P. G. Signal
|
100-500ms
|
|
Switches
|
ATX Logic on-off additional
power rocker switch
|
Over Voltage Protection recycle
AC to reset
|
| +5V trip point < +6.8V |
| +3.3V trip point < +4.5V |
| +12V trip point <+15.6V |
|
|
Color
|
Black color painted
|
Silver color painted
|
Dimension
|
15cm(L)x14cm(W)x8.6cm(H)
|
|
Net Weight
|
2.5kg
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Copyright © 2003 Thermaltake Technology Co., Ltd. All Rights
Reserved.
"Tt", Thermaltake, ThermalTake are trademarks of
Thermaltake Technology Co., Ltd.
All other registered trademarks belong to their respective
companies.
|
 |
|
 |
|
|