11.00V output from 12V rail, Compaq (OEM by Liteon) 250W PSU

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  • Phil_123
    Member
    • Dec 2005
    • 21
    • Unknown

    #1

    11.00V output from 12V rail, Compaq (OEM by Liteon) 250W PSU

    Is there any way to increase the voltage output back to a normal level, around +12V?
  • Rainbow
    Badcaps Legend
    • Aug 2005
    • 1375

    #2
    Re: 11.00V output from 12V rail, Compaq (OEM by Liteon) 250W PSU

    Did you test that under load?

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    • Phil_123
      Member
      • Dec 2005
      • 21
      • Unknown

      #3
      Re: 11.00V output from 12V rail, Compaq (OEM by Liteon) 250W PSU

      Originally posted by Rainbow
      Did you test that under load?
      No.

      Comment

      • tiresias
        Badcaps Veteran
        • Feb 2006
        • 489

        #4
        Re: 11.00V output from 12V rail, Compaq (OEM by Liteon) 250W PSU

        Originally posted by Phil_123
        No.
        You'll have to do that to obtain a realistic reading of the PSU's 12Vdc output. Many PSUs, even among the "better" brands will give a low, (often out-of-spec low), 12V output will all lines unloaded. You'll see a number of manufacturers state minimum loads for each rail, in addition to the usual maximum.

        I usually use large wirewound resistors to load a PSU, although any other constant resistive load, such as 12V car light bulbs, will also work well.

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        • Phil_123
          Member
          • Dec 2005
          • 21
          • Unknown

          #5
          Re: 11.00V output from 12V rail, Compaq (OEM by Liteon) 250W PSU

          Originally posted by tiresias
          You'll have to do that to obtain a realistic reading of the PSU's 12Vdc output. Many PSUs, even among the "better" brands will give a low, (often out-of-spec low), 12V output will all lines unloaded. You'll see a number of manufacturers state minimum loads for each rail, in addition to the usual maximum.

          I usually use large wirewound resistors to load a PSU, although any other constant resistive load, such as 12V car light bulbs, will also work well.
          I use this PSU to power this configuration:
          Intel P3 933Mhz
          Asus CUSL2-C Black Pearl
          NCP PC133 256MB SDRAM
          WD800JB x 2
          Radeon 9600XT
          5 port NEC USB2.0 card
          Aureal Audio sound card
          Liteon 52x32x52x16x combo drive
          Floppy drive

          On the PSU sticker, it says
          +5V 25A \______ Combined max power 145W
          +3.3V 14A /
          +12V 8A
          +5V AUX 1A
          -12V 0.8A
          -5V 0.5A

          Both UNI-T DT830B multimeter and Motherboard Monitor 5 gave me a jumping +12V reading of around +11.00V to +11.53V.

          I experienced random program errors and reboots until I replaced the psu with Seventeam ST-420BKP.
          Last edited by Phil_123; 04-23-2006, 08:48 AM.

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