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Be Quiet! Pure Power L8 630W Power Supply Review

Additional technical assistance: Peter McFarland and Jeremy Price.

Correctly testing power supplies is a complex procedure and KitGuru have configured a test bench which can deliver up to a 2,000 watt DC load. Due to public requests we have changed our temperature settings recently – previously we rated with ambient temperatures at 25C, we have increased ambient temperatures by 10c (to 35c) in our environment to greater reflect warmer internal chassis conditions.

We use combinations of the following hardware:

• SunMoon SM-268

• CSI3710A Programmable DC load (+3.3V and +5V outputs)

• CSI3711A Programmable DC load (+12V1, +12V2, +12V3, and +12V4)

• Extech Power Analyzer

• Extech MultiMaster MM570 digital multimeter

• SkyTronic DSL 2 Digital Sound Level Meter (6-130dBa)

• Digital oscilloscope (20M S/s with 12 Bit ADC)

• Variable Autotransformer, 1.4 KVA

DC Output Load Regulation

Combined

DC Load

+3.3V
+5V
+12V
+5VSB
-12V
A
V
A
V
A
V
A
V
A V
75W
1.03
3.36
1.43
5.13
4.95
12.27
0.50
5.08
0.20
-12.02
150W
2.04
3.34
2.94
5.06
10.04
12.23
0.50
5.05
0.30
-12.06
300W
4.28
3.30
6.12
4.98
20.42
12.18
1.00
5.02
0.30
-12.10
450W
6.59
3.27
8.42
4.96
31.84
12.13
1.50
4.99
0.30
-12.11
600W
9.96
3.23
12.17
4.94
41.68
12.08
2.50
4.96
0.30
-12.12

The Be Quiet supply has minor fluctuation on the +3.3V and +5V output, but it doesn't raise any red flags and power delivery remains stable at all times.

Be Quiet! Pure Power L8 630W Maximum Load
701W

We managed to get 701W out of the PSU before it would shut down, gracefully.

Next we want to try Cross Loading. This basically means loads which are not balanced. If a PC for instance needs 500W on the +12V outputs but something like 30W via the combined 3.3V and +5V outputs then the voltage regulation can fluctuate badly.

Cross Load Testing +3.3V +5V +12V -12V +5VSB
A V A V A V A V A V
590W 1.0 3.35 1.0 5.11 45.0 12.01 0.2 -12.11 0.50 5.01
145W 12.0 3.27 15.0 4.95 2.0 12.23 0.2 -12.07 0.50 5.00

The supply maintained good stability under intensive cross load situations. There was drop with the +5V output from 5.11 to 4.95, but again this is within safe parameters.

We then used an oscilloscope to measure AC ripple and noise present on the DC outputs. We set the oscilloscope time base to check for AC ripple at both high and low ends of the spectrum. ATX12V V2.2 specification for DC output ripple and noise is defined in the ATX 12V power supply design guide.

ATX12V Ver 2.2 Noise/Ripple Tolerance
Output
Ripple (mV p-p)
+3.3V
50
+5V
50
+12V1
120
+12V2
120
-12V
120
+5VSB
50

Obviously when measuring AC noise and ripple on the DC outputs the cleaner (less recorded) means we have a better end result. We measured this AC signal amplitude to see how closely the unit complied with the ATX standard.

AC Ripple (mV p-p)
DC Load +3.3V +5V +12V 5VSB
75W 10 10 15 10
150W 10 15 15 10
300W 10 20 20 15
450W 15 25 30 20
600W 20 30 35 25

Noise suppression is good, especially from the +12V output, which peaks at 35 mV at 100% load.

Efficiency (%)
75W
81.28
150W
84.54
300W
86.45
450W
84.31
600W
83.22

Efficiency is impressive for an 80 Plus Bronze rated power supply, peaking at 86.45 percent at 50 percent load.

We take the issue of noise very seriously at KitGuru and this is why we have built a special home brew system as a reference point when we test noise levels of various components. Why do this? Well this means we can eliminate secondary noise pollution in the test room and concentrate on components we are testing. It also brings us slightly closer to industry standards, such as DIN 45635.

Today to test the Power Supply we have taken it into our acoustics room environment and have set our SkyTronic DSL 2 Digital Sound Level Meter (6-130dBa) one meter away from the unit. We have no other fans running so we can effectively measure just the noise from the unit itself.

As this can be a little confusing for people, here are various dBa ratings in with real world situations to help describe the various levels.

KitGuru noise guide

10dBA – Normal Breathing/Rustling Leaves
20-25dBA – Whisper
30dBA – High Quality Computer fan
40dBA – A Bubbling Brook, or a Refridgerator
50dBA – Normal Conversation
60dBA – Laughter
70dBA – Vacuum Cleaner or Hairdryer
80dBA – City Traffic or a Garbage Disposal
90dBA – Motorcycle or Lawnmower
100dBA – MP3 Player at maximum output
110dBA – Orchestra
120dBA – Front row rock concert/Jet Engine
130dBA – Threshold of Pain
140dBA – Military Jet takeoff/Gunshot (close range)
160dBA – Instant Perforation of eardrum

Noise (dBA)
75W
28.0
150W
28.0
300W
28.5
450W
30.0
600W 31.3

The power supply is extremely quiet and only becomes slightly audible at around 80% of the rated output. Up to 280W output it doesn't register on our test equipment, measuring around 28dBa. Even at full load, it is quiet, peaking at just over 31 dBa. Fantastic results and ideal for a media center system build.

Temperature (c)
Intake
Exhaust
75W
35
39
150W
35
41
300W
37
43
450W
41
51
600W
44
56

The Silent Wings fan pushes a reasonable amount of air, even if it is extremely quiet. The temperatures rise to a maximum of 12c above intake ambient.

Maximum load
Efficiency
701W
80.13

At 701W the Be Quiet! Pure Power L8 650W rated just over 80% efficiency. This is not a viable ‘real world’ situation, but its interesting nonetheless.

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