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回報翻譯問題
What if someone bought one of those watt measuring things from Amazon and then tested their pc setup for wattage with it. Would it be that simple?. If you can see the wattage is over the wattage on your PSU then you should get another and if it isn't then you're fine?.
I know the power spikes would be hard to keep track of and looking at the wattage meter as it happens, but you could still do it if you wanted to right?
Without knowing what PSU it is it's hard to say. If that's a TR-2, I'd definitely replace it. You could always try and see and then replace if it has issues. On wattage alone, a standard Core i7 8700 and a RTX 2080 should be fine on 600W, but I'm not sure what particular Thermaltake one you have.
id get something much better for the demanding gpu
Would not go cheaper then this:
https://ca.pcpartpicker.com/product/JkKKHx/corsair-cx750m-2021-750-w-80-bronze-certified-semi-modular-atx-power-supply-cp-9020222-na
Avoid stuff like Apevia and Gigabyte.
Use a power supply calculator since your cpu, gpu and some other stuff will be running off the +12v.
System might pull 380-400W on the +12v rail? Not sure if 2080 have power draw spikes.
May be you can try with some heavy benchmark and make sure PSU is enough.
If it got issue, then you can buy new PSU.
I think it won't damage hardware on above testing, but I'm not quit sure.
So better to check by yourself for the risk.
Along the line, changing your CPU could aldo increase the draw on your PSU and you'll be faced with again another PSU problem
If it's a Litepower series and if it's 3 years or older, you better get a new PSU.
https://www.techpowerup.com/gpu-specs/geforce-rtx-2080.c3224
Because the age and condition of your psu is unknown, I would approach this criterion with a lot of caution. If you don't have a power-meter to test the power supply, in a pinch, HWiNFO64 can display the watts consumed (minimum and max) at a given moment in time. It's displayed in the "sensors" UI, under Motherboard section.
You can search on the net for ideas of what psu to get, based on your budget. Example:
https://graphicscardhub.com/budget-power-supply-psu/
Happy New Year everyone!
little extra headroom it shutdown at around 875-900watts most power supplies have a little extra to give my thermaltake had next to zero.theres only 1 way to find out where yours is going to fall.
https://outervision.com/power-supply-calculator
this is how i monitor power draw/usage
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00429N19W/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1
The PSU has about 4 years of use, and it's a Thermaltake Smart 600W, so not a good PSU. It was okay for the GTX 1060 because it's not much of a power hungry GPU, but I wouldn't trust it for the RTX 2080.
So, if I take the deal, will probably get a nicer and better quality PSU, at least for peace of mind.
Thank you and Happy New Year!