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November 13th, 2001, 05:27 PM
#16
Registered User
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November 13th, 2001, 07:03 PM
#17
Adm¡nistrator
[quote]Originally posted by Ruslan:
<strong>What's why many of suppliers recommend You 300Wt or even more powerfull PSUs for new PCs - just for insurance from possible problems,caused by fake 230-250Wt PSUs - I've seen a lot of them personally. </strong><hr></blockquote>
I was more talking about fellow enthusiasts
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November 14th, 2001, 10:53 AM
#18
Registered User
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November 14th, 2001, 04:01 PM
#19
Adm¡nistrator
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November 16th, 2001, 03:20 PM
#20
The Antec PP-352x is a good one. 350 watt, P4 Ready, fully buzz-word compliant.
Around $49.
TL
BTW... Steve got beat up recently. See:
<a href="http://www.bbspot.com/News/2001/11/steve.html" target="_blank">http://www.bbspot.com/News/2001/11/steve.html</a>
[quote]Originally posted by JungleMan:
<strong>
LOL, agree with your quote, steve sucks
I think CompUSA carries Antec PSUs..and p4-ready ones...so I'll tell him to pick up a 300w just to try it out...
is it possible that if it doesn't work, it will damage the board?</strong><hr></blockquote>
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November 16th, 2001, 04:23 PM
#21
Registered User
I have three Dell's that I run as test machines, and that I have supported for a couple of years. I seen people load these to the gills with hard drives, zip drives PCI cards and have never had a problem with power.
On my gaming system that I built from scatch, I have a 400w PSU because of all the fans and hardware that I have installed.
My .02
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November 16th, 2001, 06:53 PM
#22
Adm¡nistrator
[quote]Originally posted by TechLarry:
<strong>The Antec PP-352x is a good one. 350 watt, P4 Ready, fully buzz-word compliant.
Around $49.
TL
BTW... Steve got beat up recently. See:
<a href="http://www.bbspot.com/News/2001/11/steve.html" target="_blank">http://www.bbspot.com/News/2001/11/steve.html</a>
</strong><hr></blockquote>
LOL, saw that link today, quite a funny one.
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November 16th, 2001, 09:45 PM
#23
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November 16th, 2001, 11:18 PM
#24
Adm¡nistrator
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November 16th, 2001, 11:27 PM
#25
I used to work for a company that refurbished mostly Dell and Compaq computers. Every Dell model that I can think of that I ever saw up until I left there a year ago had a proprietary power supply. Some of the motherboards that had connectors that would connect to standard ATX power supply but they had reversed several of the wires in the power supply connector and if you used a Dell motherboard and a standard ATX power supply or a standard motherboard and a Dell power supply you would smoke the board and power supply and usually everything else in the system. Just be super careful when finding a replacement power supply. Make sure the voltages are correct between the two power supplys and the pin layout is done the same or you will be buying a whole new system. Good luck.
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November 17th, 2001, 12:28 PM
#26
What kind of Dell computer does he have? Is it old or new?
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