Is 500 watts enough for a 6870?

Discussion in 'Power Supplies and UPS's' started by jack99999, Jan 1, 2012.

  1. jack99999

    jack99999 Geek

    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    8
    I know it's the minimum, but is it enough?
     
  2. Ghostman 1

    Ghostman 1 Mega Geek

    Likes Received:
    85
    Trophy Points:
    48
    6870 What ???? Where are not mind readers here... More info Pls...
     
  3. jack99999

    jack99999 Geek

    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    8
    a Radeon 6870 graphics card.
     
  4. Ghostman 1

    Ghostman 1 Mega Geek

    Likes Received:
    85
    Trophy Points:
    48
    hard to guess on those specks alone, Would help with your computer speck as well, CPU speed /hard drive ? memory and Case.. Stock case or custom.. How many fans are you pushing ?
     
  5. jack99999

    jack99999 Geek

    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    8

    It will have several fans of 120mm size and the processor could be a top of the line phenom 4 core or the new fx 4 core. I'm not decided on the hard drive.
     
  6. Ghostman 1

    Ghostman 1 Mega Geek

    Likes Received:
    85
    Trophy Points:
    48
    Yea ! 500 watts might work, but i think I would go bigger.. Maybe 700 or 800 watt should be fine..
     
  7. Invidia

    Invidia Geek Trainee

    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    1
    Indeed,I would go for 700Watts.
     
  8. edijs

    edijs Programmer

    Likes Received:
    9
    Trophy Points:
    38
    I think 500watts might fall short at some point. You always want to have some headroom. Go for 650w and up (80+ rated).
     
  9. Big B

    Big B HWF Godfather

    Likes Received:
    145
    Trophy Points:
    63
    To chime in, yeah, I don't think a 500W unit is a good call. Might work, but spring for a higher wattage unit.

    Not just a higher wattage unit, mind you, a solid unit. A 700W unit is probably fine, so long as it's not a lump of crap. Typically, Antec, Corsair, Thermaltake, Silverstone, OCZ, PC Power & Cooling...to name a few are what you want to look for. Don't go cheap, since you tend to start finding some crap like Apevia (a lower wattage unit marketed as a much higher wattage unit and cheap construction).

    At the same time, I don't think you need to spring for a 1KW unit. That's over kill unless you intend to add a second 6870 in Crossfire down the line. In your range, I'd look at anything within the 650W to 850W. It's not that you can't go past that, it's more that this becomes excessive for your computing needs.
     

Share This Page