Guys ... there's a huge difference between voltages and amperages. 15A and 18A are amperage ratings for the +12V rail. This is not the same as the actual voltage on that rail, and cannot be measured via software.Well, you can download Speedfan and it will tell you the voltages on all of the lines...whichever one it is closer to (15a or 18a) you will know which it is.
Do NOT try to use a multimeter to measure current on a PSU. I'd generally be inclined to trust the label, unless the website posts an explicit correction. Which PSU is it?
Would I just unplug the line from the mobo and connect it to the two wires? I am assuming that the plug shaped like a square with 4 boxes is the 12V thing. The only problem is the only multimeter I have maxes out at 10 amps.use one of these, however they only test voltage and not load
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Would I just unplug the line from the mobo and connect it to the two wires? I am assuming that the plug shaped like a square with 4 boxes is the 12V thing. The only problem is the only multimeter I have maxes out at 10 amps.![]()
Guys ... there's a huge difference between voltages and amperages. 15A and 18A are amperage ratings for the +12V rail. This is not the same as the actual voltage on that rail, and cannot be measured via software.
Newegg just get their specs from the manufacturer, but it could quite possibly be right. Could you please post a link?Another question that is why I needed to know the amps is if a 7600gt would work at its full power at 15 amps. My power supply has 400 watts. (Another thing I found is my power supply on newegg says 18 amps. That makes 2 for 18 and 1 for 15)