550 Rosewill SLI enough for dual GTS 320mb?

AAAsnwbordr

New Member
The title says it...

My set up is in my signature but with dual gts' 320mb. I'd start out with a single graphics but i want to keep the near future in mind.
The reason why I ask is that the psu is SLI but it seems a bit short on the wattage.
 
I highly doubt that PSU would work for dual 8800GTS's. The wattage is too low, and i'm guessing the amperage isnt that great either.
 
Either PSU is sufficient for a single 8800GTS or GTX, but not for two. SLI certification simply means that it can support some SLI configurations, not that it can support any cards in SLI. That PSU would be fine for a pair of 7600GTs, for example, but not 8800 series cards.
 
Either PSU is sufficient for a single 8800GTS or GTX, but not for two. SLI certification simply means that it can support some SLI configurations, not that it can support any cards in SLI. That PSU would be fine for a pair of 7600GTs, for example, but not 8800 series cards.
When they say "SLI-Ready", I believe it just means that it has two or more PCI-E adapters to power two cards.
 
[-0MEGA-];705723 said:
When they say "SLI-Ready", I believe it just means that it has two or more PCI-E adapters to power two cards.
Manufacturers can use the term "SLI ready" to mean whatever they want (I've even seen PSUs say it without two PCI-E connectors), but if they're using the nVidia SLI Ready logo, it needs to have passed certification:
http://www.slizone.com/object/slizone_build_psu.html
nVidia said:
Only power supplies that pass NVIDIA SLI certification can be called "NVIDIA SLI-Ready certified." Be sure to look for the NVIDIA SLI-Ready badge when you buy your next power supply.
In this case Rosewill has no official certification, so calling the PSU SLI Ready is really just meaningless marketing.
 
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no way would I try to run a high priced card that cost me over $300.00 on a PSU that cost under $100.00 :cool: :eek:



thats like running a ferrai on no name, generic motor oil :(
 
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