negisensei Posted February 3, 2021 Share Posted February 3, 2021 The local PC shop has these on sale right now and they are roughly the same price (Just a little over a hundred bucks equivalent) and was wondering if anyone had any experience with either these PSUs and enlighten me...I've been using PSUs from Seasonic, Cooler Master, Corsair, and such, and I just got curious with the above mentioned PSUs and if they are any good (or safe) and might grab one of them.Thank you in advanced! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EyMiMayhem Posted February 3, 2021 Share Posted February 3, 2021 (edited) The local PC shop has these on sale right now and they are roughly the same price (Just a little over a hundred bucks equivalent) and was wondering if anyone had any experience with either these PSUs and enlighten me... I've been using PSUs from Seasonic, Cooler Master, Corsair, and such, and I just got curious with the above mentioned PSUs and if they are any good (or safe) and might grab one of them. Thank you in advanced!The msi has rattle noises and gigabyte's efficieny in low areas arent good and can be rly noisy under load..As much as i know the gigabyte is made by meic a ac adapter brand and more or less new to psu.Msi possible cwt, they can build good units. Anyway nay. Would grab a trusty Seasonic instead. Focus or the new gx/px series.No rebrand, rly solid quality and damn nice quite fans. Edited February 3, 2021 by EyMiMayhem Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JimmyRJump Posted February 4, 2021 Share Posted February 4, 2021 When buying a power supply from brands that don't make any themselves, try to find out who the original maker is. Don't cheap-out on a PSU, it's the component that powers your expensive system. Better to have it doing what it needs to do than adding a marvelous fire to the festive atmosphere during the holidays. Stay with brands like Seasonic, Antec, coolermaster, Corsair and the likes. Go for Gold or Platinum efficiency. And don't buy a monster wattage PSU because it'll lose its efficiency when not going higher than half its capacity. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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