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Specifications:
This
particular product is currently only available in
550 watts (Model
No. ULT-X2550P).
This
power supply has a continuous wattage of 550 which is more
than enough power for most computer systems. Now how is this
wattage determined? Well to understand that, you need to know
what rails are.
The power
specifications are listed below:

Rails are basically well regulated transformers which
convert domestic current into the voltages that your
computer system can use. There are essentially two different
rails: the 3.3/5v rail and the 12v rail. In this particular
case the approximate maximum peak output of the 3.3/5v rail
is 160 watts and the 12v is 408 watts, which is essentially
how the wattage of this power supply is determined.
The 3.3/5v rail is responsible for the motherboard, memory,
PCI cards, AGP card and so on. While the 12v rail is
responsible for the HDD�s, DVD, CD-ROM, fans, etc.
Also, some might be interested to know the peak amps on each
rail. The +3.3V is 30A and the +5V is 25A. Unlike most power
supplies with only one +12V rail, this product has two. The
+12V1 is 17A and the +12V2 is 18A.

This power supply meets
ATX 12V v2.01 specifications. This basically means that a
power supply must be able to sustain full load in 50�
C (122�
F) ambient conditions. Although, power output on all models
will decrease ~1�
C starting at an ambient temperature of 40�
C. Having the ATX 12V v2.01 specification is important
because some power supplies tend to overheat and shut down
the system under max load. The efficiency is within
specification and is 71% efficient at 550 watts. Higher end power
supplies float in the ~85% range. Note that the more
efficient a power supply is, the less heat is generated and
therefore won't require excessive cooling.

I've been informed from Ultra Products that this product
will be
available with Active Power Factor Correction (APFC). Please
note that this review sample does not have APFC. So, if you
are interested in this product, keep in mind that in the
near future
another model will have this feature. Active PFC is preferred over Passive PFC because
it provides more efficient power frequency. This reduces
total harmonics, corrects input voltage, and it allows for a
full input voltage range. The disadvantage is that it
increases the cost of the power supply and tends to run
hotter than a non-PFC unit at 115V. As a matter of fact
their model with APFC generates enough heat at 550W to
warrant an additional fan in the back of the unit.
Additionally, this product is 100% Hi-pot, ATE (Automatic
Test Equipment) & Burn-in
function tested. What the heck does all that mean?
Production Hi-pot testing ensures insulation integrity.
In addition to being ATE tested, they bring a random sample
back from the factory to the Taiwan office every day to get
loaded on an ATE overnight. This is quite impressive. Finally, Burn-in is really a stress test and means
it was tested at full load and still meets specs.
A power supply also needs to be fail-safe. This unit has
Over Voltage Protection (OVP), Over Current Protection (OCP),
Short Circuit Protection (SCP), and Over Temperature
Protection (OTP).
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