| Dimitrios Tzortzakakis 2005-07-24, 9:03 pm |
| Your M/B has many power supply connectors,3 X 3.3 V,4 X 5 V,12 V,-12V,-5V, 6
X GND if it is a standard ATX and another connector with two 12V wires if it
is a P4 one.To really find out which wire carries a higher current, you have
to use an ammeter.None of the compontents are supplied by the switching PSU
outs AFAIK, on board stabilizers with quite many capacitors filter out the
ripple.
--
Tzortzakakis Dimitrios
major in electrical engineering, freelance electrician
FH von Iraklion-Kreta, freiberuflicher Elektriker
dimtzort AT otenet DOT gr
Ο "Sammy-Jo" <no_thanks@mail.com> έγραψε στο μήνυμα
news:96986D67DAFC671F3M4@66.250.146.159...
>
>
> On Mon 18 Jul 2005 19:21:39, John Smith wrote:
> <news:dbgrvj$dp2$1@nwrdmz02.dmz.ncs.ea.ibs-infra.bt.com>
>
>
> Weird. Can I double check with you to make sure of what you are
> saying about the extra power being needed on the 5V line.
>
> I have read the theory but I have no practical experience of this and
> wanted to know of someone who had actually checked it out in real
> life.
>
> ------
>
> I read that the fast Durons (Applebreds) are like Thoroughbred B
> Athlons. See http://fab51.com/cpu/guide/opn-xp-e.html#a-bred
>
> The cpu entry at the bottom of page 7 of this document suggests that
> the voltage is 12V.
> <http://www.amd.com/us-
> en/assets/content_type/white_papers_and_tech_docs/26003.pdf>
>
> Also this web page http://takaman.jp/D/?english suggests that
> different power *Athlons* vary by the amount of 12V they use.
|