PSU required wattage
I am planning on buying, when it's released, an i7-9700k with an Asus Z390 Maximus Hero XI and a 1070ti. I currently own a Corsair H100i V2, 2x 8gb Kingston ddr4, 3x thermaltake riing 120mm fans.
The question is if everything will work fine with a Xfx Xtr 650w 80+ gold. I am not overclocking any of the components.
Thanks in advance.
power-supply gpu intel-core-i7
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I am planning on buying, when it's released, an i7-9700k with an Asus Z390 Maximus Hero XI and a 1070ti. I currently own a Corsair H100i V2, 2x 8gb Kingston ddr4, 3x thermaltake riing 120mm fans.
The question is if everything will work fine with a Xfx Xtr 650w 80+ gold. I am not overclocking any of the components.
Thanks in advance.
power-supply gpu intel-core-i7
add a comment |
I am planning on buying, when it's released, an i7-9700k with an Asus Z390 Maximus Hero XI and a 1070ti. I currently own a Corsair H100i V2, 2x 8gb Kingston ddr4, 3x thermaltake riing 120mm fans.
The question is if everything will work fine with a Xfx Xtr 650w 80+ gold. I am not overclocking any of the components.
Thanks in advance.
power-supply gpu intel-core-i7
I am planning on buying, when it's released, an i7-9700k with an Asus Z390 Maximus Hero XI and a 1070ti. I currently own a Corsair H100i V2, 2x 8gb Kingston ddr4, 3x thermaltake riing 120mm fans.
The question is if everything will work fine with a Xfx Xtr 650w 80+ gold. I am not overclocking any of the components.
Thanks in advance.
power-supply gpu intel-core-i7
power-supply gpu intel-core-i7
asked Aug 4 '18 at 20:41
Leoplate25Leoplate25
61
61
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1 Answer
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- The announced TDP of the i7-9700k is 95W according to Intel and Wikichip.
- the Asus Z390 Maximus Hero XI is not released yet so there is no concrete data available but a gaming motherboard can easily use up to 450W if overclocked. As you don't want to do that we'll calculate 250W. Here they overclocked similar MoBos and got a max of 250W.
- As you have not mentioned which GTX 1070 Ti you want, so I just took the ones from Nvidia 180W
- I couldn't find the required wattage for the Corsair H100i V2 but found out it needed two headers as power source á 1.8W = 3.6W
- Again you did not specify the type of RAM but I assumed around 4W per stick = 8W
- 3x fans = 3x 1.8W = 5.4W
- I assume you have one HDD and one SSD á ~ 10W = 20W
All summarised together equals 562W, this means your PSU should not be maxed out but doesn't get bored either.
If anyone has better links/information please comment and I'll correct my answer.
ark.intel.com und ark.intel.com/de are nifty places for specs.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:36
1
Well, I've already linked to ark.intel.com
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:38
1
The motherboard itself uses only a few dozen watts at most. Under load, most of the power is fed to the processor, with some power lost in voltage conversion at the VRM.
– bwDraco
Jan 25 at 0:40
Naah, I snuck that in there while you weren;t looking. asus.com/de/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications und dlcdnets.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA1151/ROG_MAXIMUS_X_HERO/… asus.com/us/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications could also be handy.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:43
Ah well, thanks. I did not look if you edited it and just saw there was a link to ark.intel.com. thanks by the way.
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:44
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
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1 Answer
1
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oldest
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votes
- The announced TDP of the i7-9700k is 95W according to Intel and Wikichip.
- the Asus Z390 Maximus Hero XI is not released yet so there is no concrete data available but a gaming motherboard can easily use up to 450W if overclocked. As you don't want to do that we'll calculate 250W. Here they overclocked similar MoBos and got a max of 250W.
- As you have not mentioned which GTX 1070 Ti you want, so I just took the ones from Nvidia 180W
- I couldn't find the required wattage for the Corsair H100i V2 but found out it needed two headers as power source á 1.8W = 3.6W
- Again you did not specify the type of RAM but I assumed around 4W per stick = 8W
- 3x fans = 3x 1.8W = 5.4W
- I assume you have one HDD and one SSD á ~ 10W = 20W
All summarised together equals 562W, this means your PSU should not be maxed out but doesn't get bored either.
If anyone has better links/information please comment and I'll correct my answer.
ark.intel.com und ark.intel.com/de are nifty places for specs.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:36
1
Well, I've already linked to ark.intel.com
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:38
1
The motherboard itself uses only a few dozen watts at most. Under load, most of the power is fed to the processor, with some power lost in voltage conversion at the VRM.
– bwDraco
Jan 25 at 0:40
Naah, I snuck that in there while you weren;t looking. asus.com/de/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications und dlcdnets.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA1151/ROG_MAXIMUS_X_HERO/… asus.com/us/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications could also be handy.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:43
Ah well, thanks. I did not look if you edited it and just saw there was a link to ark.intel.com. thanks by the way.
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:44
add a comment |
- The announced TDP of the i7-9700k is 95W according to Intel and Wikichip.
- the Asus Z390 Maximus Hero XI is not released yet so there is no concrete data available but a gaming motherboard can easily use up to 450W if overclocked. As you don't want to do that we'll calculate 250W. Here they overclocked similar MoBos and got a max of 250W.
- As you have not mentioned which GTX 1070 Ti you want, so I just took the ones from Nvidia 180W
- I couldn't find the required wattage for the Corsair H100i V2 but found out it needed two headers as power source á 1.8W = 3.6W
- Again you did not specify the type of RAM but I assumed around 4W per stick = 8W
- 3x fans = 3x 1.8W = 5.4W
- I assume you have one HDD and one SSD á ~ 10W = 20W
All summarised together equals 562W, this means your PSU should not be maxed out but doesn't get bored either.
If anyone has better links/information please comment and I'll correct my answer.
ark.intel.com und ark.intel.com/de are nifty places for specs.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:36
1
Well, I've already linked to ark.intel.com
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:38
1
The motherboard itself uses only a few dozen watts at most. Under load, most of the power is fed to the processor, with some power lost in voltage conversion at the VRM.
– bwDraco
Jan 25 at 0:40
Naah, I snuck that in there while you weren;t looking. asus.com/de/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications und dlcdnets.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA1151/ROG_MAXIMUS_X_HERO/… asus.com/us/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications could also be handy.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:43
Ah well, thanks. I did not look if you edited it and just saw there was a link to ark.intel.com. thanks by the way.
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:44
add a comment |
- The announced TDP of the i7-9700k is 95W according to Intel and Wikichip.
- the Asus Z390 Maximus Hero XI is not released yet so there is no concrete data available but a gaming motherboard can easily use up to 450W if overclocked. As you don't want to do that we'll calculate 250W. Here they overclocked similar MoBos and got a max of 250W.
- As you have not mentioned which GTX 1070 Ti you want, so I just took the ones from Nvidia 180W
- I couldn't find the required wattage for the Corsair H100i V2 but found out it needed two headers as power source á 1.8W = 3.6W
- Again you did not specify the type of RAM but I assumed around 4W per stick = 8W
- 3x fans = 3x 1.8W = 5.4W
- I assume you have one HDD and one SSD á ~ 10W = 20W
All summarised together equals 562W, this means your PSU should not be maxed out but doesn't get bored either.
If anyone has better links/information please comment and I'll correct my answer.
- The announced TDP of the i7-9700k is 95W according to Intel and Wikichip.
- the Asus Z390 Maximus Hero XI is not released yet so there is no concrete data available but a gaming motherboard can easily use up to 450W if overclocked. As you don't want to do that we'll calculate 250W. Here they overclocked similar MoBos and got a max of 250W.
- As you have not mentioned which GTX 1070 Ti you want, so I just took the ones from Nvidia 180W
- I couldn't find the required wattage for the Corsair H100i V2 but found out it needed two headers as power source á 1.8W = 3.6W
- Again you did not specify the type of RAM but I assumed around 4W per stick = 8W
- 3x fans = 3x 1.8W = 5.4W
- I assume you have one HDD and one SSD á ~ 10W = 20W
All summarised together equals 562W, this means your PSU should not be maxed out but doesn't get bored either.
If anyone has better links/information please comment and I'll correct my answer.
edited Jan 25 at 0:35
K7AAY
3,86921638
3,86921638
answered Aug 4 '18 at 22:56
Nordlys JegerNordlys Jeger
783417
783417
ark.intel.com und ark.intel.com/de are nifty places for specs.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:36
1
Well, I've already linked to ark.intel.com
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:38
1
The motherboard itself uses only a few dozen watts at most. Under load, most of the power is fed to the processor, with some power lost in voltage conversion at the VRM.
– bwDraco
Jan 25 at 0:40
Naah, I snuck that in there while you weren;t looking. asus.com/de/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications und dlcdnets.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA1151/ROG_MAXIMUS_X_HERO/… asus.com/us/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications could also be handy.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:43
Ah well, thanks. I did not look if you edited it and just saw there was a link to ark.intel.com. thanks by the way.
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:44
add a comment |
ark.intel.com und ark.intel.com/de are nifty places for specs.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:36
1
Well, I've already linked to ark.intel.com
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:38
1
The motherboard itself uses only a few dozen watts at most. Under load, most of the power is fed to the processor, with some power lost in voltage conversion at the VRM.
– bwDraco
Jan 25 at 0:40
Naah, I snuck that in there while you weren;t looking. asus.com/de/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications und dlcdnets.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA1151/ROG_MAXIMUS_X_HERO/… asus.com/us/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications could also be handy.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:43
Ah well, thanks. I did not look if you edited it and just saw there was a link to ark.intel.com. thanks by the way.
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:44
ark.intel.com und ark.intel.com/de are nifty places for specs.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:36
ark.intel.com und ark.intel.com/de are nifty places for specs.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:36
1
1
Well, I've already linked to ark.intel.com
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:38
Well, I've already linked to ark.intel.com
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:38
1
1
The motherboard itself uses only a few dozen watts at most. Under load, most of the power is fed to the processor, with some power lost in voltage conversion at the VRM.
– bwDraco
Jan 25 at 0:40
The motherboard itself uses only a few dozen watts at most. Under load, most of the power is fed to the processor, with some power lost in voltage conversion at the VRM.
– bwDraco
Jan 25 at 0:40
Naah, I snuck that in there while you weren;t looking. asus.com/de/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications und dlcdnets.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA1151/ROG_MAXIMUS_X_HERO/… asus.com/us/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications could also be handy.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:43
Naah, I snuck that in there while you weren;t looking. asus.com/de/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications und dlcdnets.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA1151/ROG_MAXIMUS_X_HERO/… asus.com/us/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-X-HERO/specifications could also be handy.
– K7AAY
Jan 25 at 0:43
Ah well, thanks. I did not look if you edited it and just saw there was a link to ark.intel.com. thanks by the way.
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:44
Ah well, thanks. I did not look if you edited it and just saw there was a link to ark.intel.com. thanks by the way.
– Nordlys Jeger
Jan 25 at 0:44
add a comment |
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