57 all together. but since they are spread out over multiple rails, you're gonna loss some current in the process.. I think it might work. Ceewi1 Would know for sure.
Yes, the Neo650 should be sufficient for a pair of 8800GTs.I'm looking to upgrade to a Q9950 and maybe two 8800GT video cards? I have a Antec 650 Neopower psu at the moment and was wondering if it will be enough for the above new parts ? If not then maybe just one 8800GT. Thanks for any recommendations.
Correctherme, they don't add ( the 19amps rails ) but rather you divide the number bellow the 12 rails in teh sticker of the power supply between 12 and the result is that max output of amps, which would give 52 amps
The method that chupacabra mentioned will reliably calculate the total power that can be output over the +12V rails. The issue you've mentioned comes into play because it's difficult to perfectly balance the load between the rails. If you've got a total of 52A and 19A on each rail, for example, you're more likely to hit the 19A limit on one of the rails before you hit the total 52A limit, by sheer virtue of the fact that some rails will be more heavily loaded than others. This is why compliant dual rail PSUs (two rails with at most 20A on each) aren't often recommended for mid-range to high-end SLI - even if they were to total to 40A, which may be sufficient for the system, you're quite likely to hit the 20A limit on one of the rails.I've heard of that before. Is that really a good way to get the total output over all rails though? I've heard that some PSU's can lose upwards of 20-30% of max current when they are spread over multiple rails, which isn't even close to the measly 7% loss when tallying that way..
Anyways thanks for reminding me, I'll make a mental note.![]()