'Dirty Harry' wrote:
| I don't have money of a new PS but I have plenty of old ones lying around.
| I'd like to use the 350 for the computer and a 250 for the hard drives
| (5)...I know the green wire has something to do with starting up the
| ps...help me out guys
.
_____
If you use one power supply for the motherboard and slots, another for the
drives, you should be ok. It is a bad idea to connect two power supplies in
parallel to the motherboard.
#1. You might have a alternative for the drives. Drives don't use much
power except when spinning up. Some BIOS have a setting to delay hard drive
spin-up (spin-up is staggered over a short period of time.
#2. Check at the manufacturer web site for each of your hard drives and add
up the power consumption. You will find that most drives use less power
than you think.
#3. Keep in mind that at the time your graphics card might be demanding the
most power that it is unlikely that you will have many of the drives using
more than average power.
#4. An ATX12V power supply has 'load sharing'. That means power is shifted
to what ever voltage rails require it. The TOTAL power output is limited to
the over all supply rating, but individual voltages can use up to perhaps
80% of the total supply rating.
I recommend you check the amount of power your really need before
jury-rigging two power supplies. And check to see if the larger single
power supply alone causes any problems.
See
http://www.formfactors.org/developer/specs/ATX12V%20PSDG2.01.pdf
for ATX12V specifications and information on
load sharing
connector pin-out
Power ON#
Power Good.
Phil Weldon
"Dirty Harry" <nothin.DeleteThis@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:_PAri.19239$fJ5.9990@pd7urf1no...
|I don't have money of a new PS but I have plenty of old ones lying around.
| I'd like to use the 350 for the computer and a 250 for the hard drives
| (5)...I know the green wire has something to do with starting up the
| ps...help me out guys
.
|
| >> Stay informed about: How can I use 2 power supplies at once