It's not going to let use view your saved build. Post the specs. From looking at what they offer the only good units they have are the 2 Evga GS units, everything else isn't very good.
Out of that list most are low quality, the two cheapest units would be the XFX TS model for basic systems, or if you plan to upgrade or go high end, the 850w EVGA GS.
(We dont know the build)
The Corsair CSM Series CS650M 80 Plus Gold Certified Modular Ultra Quiet Power Supply would probably be your best option it is reliable and probably won't burn your house down.
The Corsair CSM Series CS650M 80 Plus Gold Certified Modular Ultra Quiet Power Supply would probably be your best option it is reliable and probably won't burn your house down.
It's not going to let use view your saved build. Post the specs. From looking at what they offer the only good units they have are the 2 Evga GS units, everything else isn't very good.
sorry for that I thought anyone could see it
Thermaltake Urban S21
Intel® Core™ i5-4690K 3.5 GHz
Deepcool Captain 120 120MM CPU Liquid Cooler
1TB Western Digital Caviar Black SATA-III 6.0Gb/s 7200 RPM HDD
8GB (4GBx2) DDR3/1600MHz Dual Channel Memory
ASUS Z97-P
600 Watts - Corsair CX600M
EVGA Superclocked NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770 2GB
Corsairs low end units are manufactures by CWT, not seasonic. They are still quality but they lack Japanese capacitors, as theirs are Chinese, and tend to fail often.
The XFX model, the other brands are low quality
Creature, corsair VS, CX, CS, and RM series units use low quality capacitors. Cheap caps=Cheap units.
ok ill go with the xfx. btw how hard is it to change one psu for another do they come with all the connections you'll need or do you half to buy a bunch of adapters and wires when you upgrade?
The unit should come with everything you need, and some extras hardwired to the unit.
Replacing a unit is as simple as unclicping the connectors, unscrew the unit, pull it out, and stick in the new one.
The unit should come with everything you need, and some extras hardwired to the unit.
Replacing a unit is as simple as unclicping the connectors, unscrew the unit, pull it out, and stick in the new one.