SilverStone has announced its new high-wattage 80 Plus Titanium PSUs for high-performance desktop computers. The new Strider Titanium power supplies are rated for up to 1500 W output. The main selling point of the new power supplies is their depth, which has been shrunk to 180 mm, making them compatible with smaller chassis and builds.

There is an ongoing trend towards miniaturization of all kinds of computers, whether they are mobile or stationary. Nowadays there are enthusiast-class Mini-ITX components (mainboards, PSUs, etc.) and therefore MSI’s recently launched X299M Gaming Pro Carbon AC high-end Micro-ATX motherboard supporting three graphics cards and 10 storage devices does not come as a surprise. Meanwhile, Micro-ATX cases sometimes cannot accommodate large high-wattage PSUs that are usually 220 mm long. As a result, as performance of Micro-ATX is growing, so is demand for smaller high-efficiency ~1 kW power supplies.

SilverStone is responding to this demand with its new ATX12V V2.4-compliant high-wattage Strider Titanium PSUs that comply with the 80 Plus Titanium requirements, are rated for 1100 W, 1300 W and 1500 W output and are 180-mm deep (or long, however you put it). To get the 80 Plus Titanium badge, a PSU is mandated to be at least 94% efficient under a 20%, 50% and 100% load as well as at least 90% efficient under a 10% load. The latter is particularly important for high-wattage PSUs because it helps to take advantage of energy efficiency of modern PC hardware even with a very powerful PSU.

SilverStone Strider Titanium 1kW Series Output Specifications
  SST1100-TI SST1300-TI SST1500-TI
Rated Combined Rated Combined Rated Combined
+3.3V 25 A 82.5 W 25 A 82.5 W 25 A 82.5 W
+5V 22 A 110 W 22 A 110 W 22 A 110 W
+12V 92 A 1104 W 108 A 1296 W 125 A 1500 W
-12V 0.3 A 3.6 W 0.3 A 3.6 W 0.3 A 3.6 W
+5Vsb 3 A 15 W 3 A 15 W 3 A 15 W
Total Power 1100 W 1300 W 1500 W

Like the many advanced PSUs these days, the SilverStone Strider Titanium 1 kW power supplies feature a modular design and come with two EPS12V connectors to enable compatibility with 2P server/workstations platforms, as well as with contemporary high-end desktop motherboards such as those based on AMD’s X399 'Threadripper' and Intel’s X299 'Skylake-X' platforms. As for other types of connectors, the new Strider Titanium PSUs have eight 6-2-pin (8-pin) PCIe auxiliary power connectors for graphics cards (just in case you run four AMD Radeon RX Vega 64 boards), 16 SATA power plugs, six Molex power outputs, and one FDD connector. All cables are flat to ensure greater flexibility.

SilverStone claims that the new Strider Titanium 1 kW PSUs can work 24/7 with 50℃ operating temperature and will be absolutely quiet under light loads when their 135-mm fan is off. Meanwhile, even under high loads, the noise levels of the PSUs will not exceed 36 dBA. As for reliability ratings, the new Strider Titaniums are speced for 100,000 hours MTBF. To ensure safety, the power supplies are equipped with over current, over power, over/under voltage, over temperature, and short circuit protection mechanisms.

SilverStone Strider Titanium 1kW Series Connectivity Specifications
Connector type SST1100-TI SST1300-TI SST1500-TI
ATX 24 Pin 1
EPS 4+4 Pin 2
PCIe 6+2 Pin 8
SATA 16
4P Molex 6
Floppy 1

The Strider Titanium SST-1100-TI, SST-1300-TI and SST-1500-TI are already listed by major retailers, including Newegg and others The most affordable model of the new Strider Titanium PSU has MSRP of $299.99/€269.90, whereas the highest-performing 1.5 kW model has suggested retail price of $399.99/€345.50. Meanwhile, the mid-range SST1300-TI is priced at €288.90 in Europe. All new PSUs are covered by a five-year warranty.



Related Reading:

Source: SilverStone

Comments Locked

11 Comments

View All Comments

  • Chaitanya - Saturday, August 19, 2017 - link

    Initially Seasonic shrunk their modular PSUs to 140mm now these KW beasts have started to go down in size. Its a good trend to see more efficient and smaller PSUs.
  • Hurr Durr - Saturday, August 19, 2017 - link

    >small case
    >high-perf GPU
    >hi-perf CPU
    >1.5 kW PSU

    Do earplugs come with it as well?
  • Samus - Saturday, August 19, 2017 - link

    At idle my ITX system is pretty quiet, almost silent. At load, well, I'm usually in a game with headphones on. Liquid cooling helps, but I know what you mean, it's hard to move that much heat when there is such a low displacement of air to dissipate it.
  • Hurr Durr - Sunday, August 20, 2017 - link

    Liquid pretty much cancels the small portion.
  • masteraleph - Sunday, August 20, 2017 - link

    Depends how much you want to mess with things. There are plenty of people who are at the very least using AIOs (and occasionally custom setups) with an ncase m1, which is 12.6 L. And I know there are a variety of other boutique and small-run cases that people are working on with watercooling in mind; one of the guys behind the m1 has been working on a 24L ATX design that would support two GPUs and multiple radiators as well.
  • techguymaxc - Saturday, August 19, 2017 - link

    The article is misleading. The author makes it sound like Silverstone has introduced a new and innovative product in the market by shrinking the length of these 1kw+ PSUs, when in reality it is no shorter than the 5+ year-old PC Power & Cooling Silencer Mark 3 1200W unit I already own. Also the poster who mentioned 140mm Seasonic PSUs is refering to lower power units which only go up to 850W (the Focus Plus series) - the standard length for their flagship Prime PSUs is only slightly shorter than these Silverstone units @ 170mm.
  • Sivar - Friday, August 25, 2017 - link

    But the extra 300W! Everyone needs that to power the eighth 1080 card stuffed into their MicroATX PC.
  • Lolimaster - Saturday, August 19, 2017 - link

    Companies should focus more on <500w Titanium PSU's, considering PC's are most of the time at well below 50% load, that 90%+ efficiency at 10% load really helps making the systems efficient for 24/7.
  • vladx - Sunday, August 20, 2017 - link

    The people with systems <500W who would also be interested in a $150+ Titanium PSU represent too small of a subset for manufacturers to be interested in offering such products.
  • jabbadap - Sunday, August 20, 2017 - link

    Nah that's Enhance doing all the hard work, Silverstone just uses platform which their usual OEMs have for them(Now-a-days Sirfa and Enhance).

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now