Conclusion

In this review we had a look at Seasonic’s latest top series, the PRIME Titanium 650W, 750W and 850W PSUs. They are not the most powerful models on the market designed for quad-GPU beats, but they are the technologically best units that Seasonic is currently offering to consumers.

It is slightly ironic to label these units as Seasonic’s “technological pinnacle”, because they are not using any of the latest “leading” topologies or technologies. As a matter of fact, their core topology is relatively common and simple; just a typical input bridge converter and APFC circuit, a resonant LLC full bridge on the primary with synchronous rectification on the secondary. It is a configuration that we have seen many times in the past, yet no other designer before Seasonic has ever reached such performance figures with it.

Seasonic made it easy for us to summarize the entirety of these units’ performance in just one word: mythical. The very high efficiency that easily broke the 80Plus Titanium certification requirements with 230V AC input was a small surprise at first, but surprise turned to shock when we began testing the units inside our hotbox. Not only the high ambient temperatures hardly shook the efficiency of the units, the power quality and voltage regulation figures were just incredible.


The AnandTech Recommended Award
For the Seasonic PRIME Titanium Series

Before testing these three units, we would not believe that such performance would be possible with a consumer-grade PC PSU.

In terms of quality, Seasonic did not hold back at all. We found only top-tier quality components in the PRIME Titanium PSUs, even down to the least significant elements of the design. The fact that the three units that we have tested display almost indistinguishable performance under the same load conditions suggests that there are no discrepancies due to component characteristics. Seasonic covers the PRIME Titanium units with a 12-year warranty, which is more than reassuring. The only small issue here is that the designer had to sacrifice some acoustics performance to ensure that the internal temperatures of the units will remain very low, even under very adverse operating conditions.

So perhaps the only real enemy of the new Seasonic PRIME Titanium series is their own retail price tag. Seasonic aims to be the best vendor with their OEM designs, and it all comes at a cost. With the 650W, 750W and 850W units retailing for $160, $175 and $200 respectively, many regular users will be satisfied with the performance of an “average” 80Plus Gold certified unit that will cost half as much, or even less. With all that being said, the retail price of these three units is not forbiddingly high - super high end PSUs reaching 1200W and above can come in at similar W/$.

But for these price tags, you get one of the most stunning PSU designs available today, combined with high efficiencies and a long warranty to back it up. 

Suggested Reading

Hot Test Results: Hot Box at 45-50ºC
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  • TEAMSWITCHER - Saturday, April 8, 2017 - link

    This site isn't nearly as useful as it once was....
  • Ian Cutress - Monday, April 10, 2017 - link

    Care to elaborate?
  • crashtech - Saturday, April 8, 2017 - link

    All these need is a Hobbs meter, they sound like a rock you can build many a system upon.
  • Stele - Sunday, April 9, 2017 - link

    Well-written review as usual, offering a good balance between technical detail and readability. I have however noticed that you use the term "primary conversion bridge" in your PSU reviews. I believe you're referring to the component which converts AC to DC; if so, it's properly called a "bridge converter". That aside, do keep up the good work!
  • surt - Sunday, April 9, 2017 - link

    In what country? Around here primary conversion bridge is definitely the correct term.
  • Stele - Monday, April 10, 2017 - link

    Actually in many if not most English-speaking countries. Countries aside - it's also used by the semiconductor industry, including manufacturers themselves. For just a few examples:-

    http://www.infineon.com/cms/en/product/transistor-...
    http://my.element14.com/bridge-rectifier-diodes?se...
    https://www.digikey.com/products/en/discrete-semic...
    http://www.mouser.com/Semiconductors/Discrete-Semi...
    http://www.vishay.com/diodes/rectifiers/bridge/
    https://www.fairchildsemi.com/products/discretes/d...

    And in standard electronic texts - try Cedra & Smith, Microelectronic Circuits (any edition).

    I was an electrical engineer :)
  • Stele - Monday, April 10, 2017 - link

    I hasten to add my original post was itself erroneous - I meant to say "bridge rectifier" not "bridge converter". Not enough coffee!
  • mobutu - Sunday, April 9, 2017 - link

    The only thing I'm interested in from this series is the minimum wattage option, the 600W fanless.
    And also hope that seasonic will offer lower wattage also in this product line. (like 300-500W range)
    I'll never use more than one GPU so have no use for PSUs more than 500-600W, even overclocked.
  • Hxx - Monday, April 10, 2017 - link

    for the price they should have included paracord cables
  • Laststop311 - Monday, April 10, 2017 - link

    I have the 750 watt version and it's a work of art. Either than fan has never spun up or i cant hear it. Even with a 5.0ghz overclock 7700k cooled with a nh d15s and thermal grizzly liquid metal with the ultra low speed adapters for the fans. Inside a fractal define r5 with 2x 140mm venturi HF intake fans and 1x 140mm fractal exhaust that comes with it. controlled with asus fanxpert. System is dead quiet and powers everythng like a boss. paired with an rx 480 overclocked to the max since i have a free sync monitor. im happy with 144hz 1920x1080 gaming on a curved 27" acer predator. Thank you seasonic for making the best PSU ever made.

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