After a lengthy hiatus, we're back with a new PSU and case reviewer. As we kick off our revised power supply testing and reviews, we wanted to cover the fundamentals of how we test and what to expect. Some of this is still a work in progress, as we have not gathered all of the equipment we would like to have, and as we move forward we will periodically provide updates to our PSU testing procedures. And with that out of the way, let's discuss how we're going to go about testing power supplies.

Effective testing of a power supply requires far more than just connecting it to a PC and using a $10 multimeter to check the voltage rails. At the very least, it requires specialized (and very expensive) equipment. At this point, most people that actually know a few things about PSUs would say, "Yes, OK, you need an adjustable load and an oscilloscope." While it's true you need those items, you can't simply grab any old adjustable load and oscilloscope. What you really need is very precise, programmable electronic loads with transient testing built-in and an oscilloscope that should comply with exact specifications, among other meters and equipment. Then of course you need to know what you are doing, as it's not simply a matter of connecting a PSU to the equipment and pressing a few buttons; there are exact loading and testing procedures, described in technical papers and guides, that need to be followed.

Programmable DC loads are an absolute necessity if you want to test a power supply. To that end, we acquired two high precision Maynuo M9714 1200 Watt and two Maynuo M9711 150 Watt electronic loads, which will allow us to draw up to 2400 Watts from 12 Volt lines and up to 150 Watts from each of the 3.3 Volt and 5 Volt lines. As these are quick-response programmable models, they will also allow us to perform transient tests in the future.

When testing a power supply, using even the best of multimeters are entirely useless. An oscilloscope is an absolute necessity and not just any oscilloscope. Intel's ATX design guide denotes that the oscilloscope should have a bandwidth of 20MHz; however, things are not nearly as simple as that. Even if you do want to purchase a proper oscilloscope, buying a 20MHz oscilloscope is a mistake. Digital oscilloscopes need to be capable of acquiring samples at least ten times faster than the frequency they are required to resolve. So, you need a 20MHz oscilloscope with a sampling rate of at least 200 MSa/s, and low range or USB connected devices cannot get anywhere close to that number.

There are of course many other minor details but we will not bore you with those. It should suffice to say that for the time being we are using a Rigol DS5042M oscilloscope, which has a bandwidth of 40MHz and a real time sampling rate of 500 MSa/s. Although that sounds impressive, actually even this device is not good enough if you want to perform transient tests properly and it cannot resolve noise out of the ripple of a signal; these are tests we plan to add in the future.

Compared to the above items, testing the efficiency of a PSU is relatively simple, once you know exactly how much power you are drawing from it. Our electronic loads tell us exactly how much power is being drawn at a given time; therefore, we only need a good AC power analyzer to tell us how much power the unit is drawing from the AC outlet. Note the "good" part, as you need a power analyzer capable of displaying true RMS values, as PSUs can generate a great deal of harmonics.

Our Extech 380803 power analyzer does a very good job at reporting the level of power that our PSU requires at any given time. We should note that all testing is being performed with a 230V/50Hz input, delivered by a 3000VA VARIAC for the perfect adjustment of the input voltage. Unfortunately, we cannot perform tests at 110V/60Hz at the moment, as that requires a high output, programmable AC power source. As a rough estimate, conversion efficiency drops by 1% to 1.5% when the input voltage is lowered to 110V/ 60Hz.

Thermal and noise testing are another complex procedure. Thermal testing is relatively simple; we only had to acquire two high precision UNI-T UT-325 digital thermometers. With four temperature probes, we can monitor the ambient temperature, the exhaust temperature of the PSU, as well as the temperature of its primary and secondary heatsinks. Noise testing however cannot be performed while the unit is being tested, as the very equipment that is used to test it generates a lot of noise. Everyone says that it is impossible to keep the unit loaded with the equipment far apart in order to perform noise testing and yes, that truly is impossible. So, it cannot be done, right? Wrong.

One of the basics of the scientific method is that you isolate the problem from a system and resolve it on its own. In other words, instead of trying to do the impossible and measure the noise of a power supply while we are testing it, there is nothing keeping us from using a non-intrusive laser tachometer to record the speed of the fan instead. Then, we can simply test the unit on its own, with the fan hotwired to a small fanless, adjustable DC PSU that we fabricated, taking noise readings with our Extech HD600 for the RPM range of the fan and cross-referencing the two tables. Not quite that difficult, was it? There is a catch however; as the unit will not be powered at the time of sound level testing, the meter cannot record any coil whine noise. Coil whine is clearly audible during testing though and we will make sure to report it if (when) we encounter a PSU whose coils could have used a little bit more lacquer. The background noise of our testing environment is about 30.4 dB(A), which figure resembles a quiet room at night. Equipment noise usually becomes audible when our instrumentation reads above 33.5 dB(A).

In order to facilitate testing power supplies more effectively, we created a test fixture for the connection between the PSU and the testing equipment, as well as a proprietary hot box. The hot box is not much more than a closed case with an air-heating device, which is controlled via a DAQ and our software. It is imperative to heat the air inside the box, not the box itself, in order to create good testing conditions. Admittedly, this self-made contraption is not perfect as it is small and has a very slow reaction rate, but it does work well for the means of simulating the environment inside a computer case. Therefore, testing will be performed at room temperature (maintained at 25 °C) and inside the hotbox (at 45-50 °C). Remember that efficiency certifications are performed at room temperature (25 °C) and a power supply can easily fail to meet its efficiency certification standards inside the hotbox!

As for the testing procedure, there are specific, detailed guidelines on how to perform it. All testing is done in accordance with Intel's Power Supply Design Guide for Desktop Form Factors and with the Generalized Test Protocol for Calculating the Energy Efficiency of Internal AC-DC and DC-DC Power Supplies. These two documents describe in detail how the equipment should be interconnected, how loading should be performed (yes, you do not simply load the power lines randomly), and the basic methodology for the acquisition of each data set. However, not all of our testing is covered and/or endorsed by these guidelines.

(Update, Apr 20th, 2015, Click for the detailed post)

Even though these documents are just a few years old, their methods fail to account for modern "enthusiast grade" computer SMPS. The industry has been making leaps on the creation of more energy-efficient devices, continuously lowering their power requirements. Nowadays, the vast majority of computers that require very powerful PSUs simply employ multiple components, such as numerous graphics cards. As the majority of energy-consuming components require a 12 V source, PSU manufacturers have been continuously driving the 12 V output of their units upwards, while the 3.3V/5V outputs remained inert or are getting weaker. There are many design rules that modern "enthusiast-grade" PSUs do not adhere to nowadays, such as the current safely limits and the maximum size of the chassis, but this particular change creates a problem with the generalized test protocol.

According to the generalized test protocol, the derating factor D of the 3.3V/5V lines should be:

Simply put, the formula is maximum rated power output of the unit divided by the sum of the power output ratings of each individual power line.

However, this formula frequently leads to the overloading of the 3.3V/5V lines with >1 kW PSUs. The effect is particularly severe in some high efficiency units, in which the designers moved the 3.3V/5V DC-to-DC conversion circuits on the connectors PCB, reducing their maximum power output significantly. Although some PSUs would operate normally even if their 3.3V/5V lines were overloaded, the continuous degradation of the 3.3V/5V lines in comparison to the 12 V line resulted to PSUs appearing in our labs that could not operate under such conditions. Therefore, we had to alter the derating factor formula in order to compensate for real world testing. Without at least two significant energy consumers, no modern system requires > 500 Watts. Greater power demand suggests the presence of devices that load only the 12 V line (i.e. GPUs, CPUs, liquid cooling pumps, Peltier effect coolers, etc.). After certain calculations and research, for units with a rated power output over 400 Watts, we will be using the following formula:

Which effectively half the impact of the 3.3V/5V lines on the calculation of the derating factor, imposing the difference on the 12V line. Furthermore, the loading criterion of the 3.3V/5V lines for a load rating X (in % of the unit's maximum output) is now changed to:

For the 12 V line(s), the loading criterion remains unchanged.

This formula results to the more realistic representation of the requirements that actual systems have, at least up to a power output realizable today.

(End of update)

Furthermore, there are no guidelines on how transient tests should be performed and the momentary power-up cross load testing that Intel recommends is far too lenient. Intel recommends that the 12V line should be loaded to < 0.1A and the 3.3V/5V lines up to just 5A. We also perform two cross load tests of our own design. In test CL1, we load the 12V line up to 80% of its maximum capacity and the 3.3V/5V lines with 2A each. In test CL2, we load the 12V line with 2A and the 3.3V/5V lines up to 80% of their maximum combined capacity.

Furthermore, it has been suggested that efficiency testing needs to be performed at specific load intervals (20% - 50% - 100%), which is considered to be the normal operating range of a PSU. However, modern systems can easily have their energy demand drop dramatically while idling, which is why we will be testing power supplies starting at 5% of their rated capacity, not 20%. Note that the conversion efficiency of all switching PSUs literally takes a dive when the load is very low, so large drops of >10% are expected and natural.

Any questions or comments on our PSU testing procedures are welcome, and as noted earlier we plan to add and/or improve some of the testing over the coming months with some additional hardware. We will provide an updated article when/if such changes are required.

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  • doctormonroe - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    Could you also provide the RPM data in the reviews?
  • E.Fyll - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    Although I do not see how RPM alone would be of any use (noise is what matters, no?), yes, I can do that. I will think about it.
  • ThomasS31 - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    Well, it could show maybe lifetime and noise/fan-lifetime expectancy relation for a given unit (~suspect :) ). Even if something at first may sound less noisy when new.... could become faster noisier.

    What I mean, if something uses a high RPM, the fan lifetime (especially the bearing/sleeve) could be decreasing faster... also fans tend to get noisier by time, so high RPM usage could cause more noise earlier in a unit/fan's lifetime.

    (Like small motherboard/notebook fans, that are silent in their early life, but "we all know", the high RPM they use make them an issue very soon.)
  • bobbozzo - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    Hi,

    If you cannot test at 110V/60Hz, how "wrong" would it be to test at 110/50Hz (using your Variac)?

    BTW, nominal Voltage in the US & CAN is 120V (not 110V) +- 5%.
    However, it is apparently 100V in Japan, with some parts 50Hz and some 60Hz.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mains_electricity#St...

    I've seen some reviewers stress-test with under-voltage and over-voltage as well.

    Thank you for the article!
  • E.Fyll - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    I cannot tell exactly how wrong it would be but it would be wrong, especially because each unit will react differently to the change of frequency. Some units might actually perform (and they should) very similarly between 50 Hz and 60 Hz, while other units could have their conversion efficiency dropped by up to 4-5%. Although the RMS voltage remains the same, the shift of the frequency would affect the PFC circuit and the ripple that will appear on the secondary. The difference would primarily depend on the primary rectifier gate(s) and the ripple suppression design. I cannot foretell how each unit will react without actually testing it. Even though the difference should be small, I find it misleading to add an improper test into my articles. I will be doing such tests (including some stress testing) once I can get a hold of a high power programmable AC source.
  • bobbozzo - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    Also, a constant-voltage transformer would be more reliable than a Variac, esp. if the voltage is changing during the testing.
    If it's an isolation transformer as well, it would have the added benefit of reduced chance of electrocution, esp. if you plugged all the test equipment in.

    However, even a 100W constant-voltage transformer can be very large.
  • E.Fyll - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    Not really. Isolation transformers are 1:1; you cannot adjust them, you are getting exactly what your distribution grid supplies to you. What I wanted to do is get my 225-235 Volts exactly at 230 Volts and the VARIAC works just fine for that. CVT's are ridiculously expensive, I could buy a programmable AC source for that kind of money, so they are out of the question.

    Thank you for being concerned about my safety. I'll be careful, I promise. :)
  • Rick83 - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    After reading the first of the series of review, there's one more thing, that might be worth testing: Whether the device is actually ErP6 compliant, if it is advertised as such. And I also didn't see a testing of the OPP/OTP/OCP/OVP circuits. Where/when/how these work would be of interest, especially in low-end units.
  • E.Fyll - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    Indeed; I do need more equipment to test ErP6 compliance though, so that will be added in the future. I do test the safeties of the PSU and will note it if (when) a PSU fails a specific safety test. Actually, it is the first thing I test; I do not want to plug my testing equipment onto a PSU that fails to meet the basic safety standards to being with, these things cost several thousands of dollars.
  • Mr Perfect - Friday, February 28, 2014 - link

    Sounds like a thorough test. It reminds me of SPCR's PSU testing, though it looks like you might have some better funding for your gear. :) That being said, SPCR is able to separate their load from the PSU somehow and do live acoustic testing(rather then measuring RPM and measuring the fan later). It may have been as simple as passing the PSU leads through a wall to the loading system, but I don't remember now. Any chance you could do live acoustic testing too?

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