GlacialPower GP-AL650A 650Watt Power Supply

GlacialPower GP-AL650A 650Watt Power Supply

 

Without a good stable power supply it
doesn’t matter what other components you have in your system and how
much they cost, the PSU is the heart of any system, and if it doesn’t
work right then nothing else will either.

Today for review I’ve got the
GlacialPower
GP-AL650A
650Watt Power Supply, this PSU is billed as a gamers power supply,
it’s not SLI certified, but it is 80plus certified. From my time with
it I’ve found it to be a quiet and stable PSU, that works well and
does what it has to do. It’s not fancy, it just works…

 

 

 

 

GlacialPower
GP-AL650A 650Watt Power Supply

Author: Kristofer Brozio

Sponsor:
GlacialPower


 

Tech
Specs,Features or the Basic Info:


GlacialPower
GP-AL650A 650Watt Power Supply



Specs/Features:


-ATX12V Version 2.2

-Design with active PFC
function

-Dual +12V rails and +5Vsb
capability 15 W

-Full output power from 0°C
to 50°C

-Full protection features of
SCP, OVP, OCP, OPP, OTP

-Power efficiency meet Energy
Star 80 plus program criterion

-Fan speed control and delay
shut down to extend components life time

-Fan switch off (0 dBA) at low
load and selectable between 8cm and 12cm

-RoHS compliance and 2 year
warranty

-Manufactured with high
reliability and in strict processes



A
Better Look at Things:


The packaging for this power
supply is rather nice, it’s classy looking box with a picture of the
PSU on the front along with specs, features and diagrams on the back.
Opening the box we find the power supply itself, along with a user
manual.. hmm, no screws and no main power cable.



The GlacialPower GP-AL650A feels
solidly made, and has a nice large fan on the bottom to help cool it
off. The side of course shows the standard identifications label, and
the back has the common honeycomb ventilation.



For connections we’ve got two 6/8
pin PCIE connectors, 6 SATA connectors, 6 Molex and 1 FDD connection.




Installation and Testing:


Since this is a smaller style PSU,
standard ATX size, it fits fine in my case with no problems except
hitting the CPU cooler, but that’s not the power supplies fault.



I installed this power supply in
my secondary system that consists of:


Intel c2d6420

2gigs Crucial Ballistix Tracer
PC2-8500 Ram

1x hard drive

1x dvd/rw

Connect3d X1800GTO video card

2x120mm fans


For load testing I ran 3dmark06
and Orthos Stress prime and monitored the 12v and 5v lines with my
trusty multimeter. Since this is my secondary testing system it gets
quite workout all the time as well.


Idle Voltages:

12v = 12.14v – 12.15v

5v = 4.99v


Load Voltages:

12v = 12.11v – 12.12v

5v = 4.99v – 5.00v



The 12v rails dropped under load,
and are well within tolerances but never stabilize, they are
constantly jumping about, but still the variances are not that bad,
though I would have liked to see them stabilize under load.






Summary
and Comments:


The GlacialPower GP-AL650A
650Watt Power Supply is silent at all times, and it’s got lots of
connections for most systems out there today.


The voltages never really
stabilized and that troubles me a bit, but still they are within ATX
specs.



DragonSteelMods gives the
GlacialPower GP-AL650A 650Watt Power Supply a 4 out of 5 score.


Pros:

-Quiet

-Lots of connections



Cons:

-Missing pieces

-Voltages jump around at load




I
would like to thank
GlacialPower for the chance to review the GP-AL650A 650Watt Power Supply and for their continued support of DSM.




review# 505