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Author Topic: ATX powersupply trick-question maybe, maybe not...  (Read 4330 times)

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Offline Daedalus

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Re: ATX powersupply trick-question maybe, maybe not...
« Reply #14 from previous page: September 16, 2004, 03:16:36 PM »
As someone already said, I'd imagine it's purely a cost saving measure. It's all well and good us relatively computer-savvy people looking for them (I have a 450W one myself), but the vast majority of machines I've seen in the past few years with these have shipped with the standard mains cable for the monitor. Maybe it was cheaper to stock twice as many standard cables than 2 different IEC cables, or maybe they figured they weren't getting used in the majority of cases, but it is most likely cost cutting, cos for an ATX to switch off the power to the monitor it needs more than the switch on the front; it needs an entire power switching circuit, which is maybe an extra 5 or 10 parts. Addto this the extra cost of a M-F lead, and this is huge in a tightly competitive mamrket such as PSUs and home PCs.
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Offline GPTTopic starter

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Re: ATX powersupply trick-question maybe, maybe not...
« Reply #15 on: September 16, 2004, 03:23:28 PM »
NO,no,no :-x

Lisen to me.

I talket to some guys that has connections in that direction.

And they say that what-I-said-previusly was the answer.

THE END.  :pissed:  
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Offline GPTTopic starter

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Re: ATX powersupply trick-question maybe, maybe not...
« Reply #16 on: September 16, 2004, 03:28:14 PM »
" for an ATX to switch off the power to the monitor it needs more than the switch on the front;"

That's why there is a switch at the back of the psu unit.

5-10 extra parts?

You only need one extra part (the switch), if it hadn't already been included in every ATX power supply on the face of the earth.
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Offline Daedalus

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Re: ATX powersupply trick-question maybe, maybe not...
« Reply #17 on: September 21, 2004, 08:30:21 PM »
Oh, I see what you're getting at now... I was going along the lines of my PSU which switches off the monitor outlet when it shuts down. *That* requires extra electronics, especially as my one doesn't use a relay for the job.
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