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Will the power supply explode?

notlikethis21

So I've been thinking lately on upgrading my power supply. My current psu runs on 450 watts and it's capable on running my system very well. But I've been thinking on upgrading it to a 750 or 650 watt psu. Will my PC explode if I upgrade my psu to a higher wattage>

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No

 

your system takes as much power as it needs. What can be bad is a low quality power supply 

Hi

 

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hi

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Just now, notlikethis21 said:

Will my PC explode if I upgrade my psu to a higher wattage>

No. The system only draws as much power as it needs from the power supply.

 

If your system is working fine with 450W then you don't need to buy a 750W.

CPU: Intel i7 6700k  | Motherboard: Gigabyte Z170x Gaming 5 | RAM: 2x16GB 3000MHz Corsair Vengeance LPX | GPU: Gigabyte Aorus GTX 1080ti | PSU: Corsair RM750x (2018) | Case: BeQuiet SilentBase 800 | Cooler: Arctic Freezer 34 eSports | SSD: Samsung 970 Evo 500GB + Samsung 840 500GB + Crucial MX500 2TB | Monitor: Acer Predator XB271HU + Samsung BX2450

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1 minute ago, Drama Lama said:

No

 

your system takes as much power as it needs

thank you!

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1 minute ago, Spotty said:

No. The system only draws as much power as it needs from the power supply.

 

If your system is working fine with 450W then you don't need to buy a 750W.

Alright. Thank you very much!

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7 hours ago, Gorilla Warfare said:

Depends on the quality.

 

Thanks man!

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These days as well, the low-mid end builds a 550-650W is more than plenty in most cases.

 

Hardware is more efficient, SLI and crossover are dead, less or no hard drives and peripherals are typically used.

 

You are better getting a higher quality than one with a large headroom in power rating that you aren't actually using.

 

Only real concern would be if yours currently is a terrible off brand unit. 

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QUOTE ME  FOR ANSWER.

 

Main PC:

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Test Rig.

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Just Sold

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| i3 9100F || Msi Gaming X gtx 1050 TI || MSI Z390 A-Pro || Kingston 1x16gb 2400mhz cl17 || Stock cooler || Kolink Horizon RGB || Corsair CV 550w || Pny CS900 120gb ||

 

Tier lists for building a PC.

 

Motherboard tier list. Tier A for overclocking 5950x. Tier B for overclocking 5900x, Tier C for overclocking 5800X. Tier D for overclocking 5600X. Tier F for 4/6 core Cpus at stock. Tier E avoid.

(Also case airflow matter or if you are using Downcraft air cooler)

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Gpu tier list. Rtx 3000 and RX 6000 not included since not so many reviews. Tier S for Water cooling. Tier A and B for overcloking. Tier C stock and Tier D avoid.

( You can overclock Tier C just fine, but it can get very loud, that is why it is not recommended for overclocking, same with tier D)

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Psu tier List. Tier A for Rtx 3000, Vega and RX 6000. Tier B For anything else. Tier C cheap/IGPU. Tier D and E avoid.

(RTX 3000/ RX 6000 Might run just fine with higher wattage tier B unit, Rtx 3070 runs fine with tier B units)

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Cpu cooler tier list. Tier 1&2 for power hungry Cpus with Overclock. Tier 3&4 for overclocking Ryzen 3,5,7 or lower power Intel Cpus. Tier 5 for overclocking low end Cpus or 4/6 core Ryzen. Tier 6&7 for stock. Tier 8&9 Ryzen stock cooler performance. Do not waste your money!

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Storage tier List. Tier A for Moving files/  OS. Tier B for OS/Games. Tier C for games. Tier D budget Pcs. Tier E if on sale not the worst but not good.

(With a grain of salt, I use tier C for OS myself)

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Case Tier List. Work In Progress. Most Phanteks airflow series cases already done!

Ask me anything :)

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On 5/31/2020 at 3:14 PM, artuc said:

These days as well, the low-mid end builds a 550-650W is more than plenty in most cases.

 

Hardware is more efficient, SLI and crossover are dead, less or no hard drives and peripherals are typically used.

 

You are better getting a higher quality than one with a large headroom in power rating that you aren't actually using.

 

Only real concern would be if yours currently is a terrible off brand unit. 

thanks! will keep that in mind.

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