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Reddit mentions of CORSAIR HXi Series, HX850i, 850 Watt, 80+ Platinum Certified, Fully Modular - Digital Power Supply

Sentiment score: 8
Reddit mentions: 13

We found 13 Reddit mentions of CORSAIR HXi Series, HX850i, 850 Watt, 80+ Platinum Certified, Fully Modular - Digital Power Supply. Here are the top ones.

CORSAIR HXi Series, HX850i, 850 Watt, 80+ Platinum Certified, Fully Modular - Digital Power Supply
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    Features:
  • High Performance Design
  • 80 PLUS Platinum certified efficiency
  • Flat black, low-profile modular cables; MTBF hours: 100,000 hours
  • 850 watts of reliable, continuous power delivery. ZeroRPM mode for fanless operation at low loads and outstanding noise reduction
  • Ten year warranty: Your guarantee of reliable operation that will last across several system builds
  • Compatibility: 4th generation Intel Core processor Ready (Intel Haswell and Z87 motherboards). ATX12V v2.4 and EPS 2.92 standards and is backward compatible with ATX12V 2.2, 2.31 and ATX12V 2.01 systems
Specs:
Color80 PLUS Platinum
Height6.8 Inches
Length18.6 Inches
Number of items1
Size850 Watts
Weight1 Pounds
Width8 Inches

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Found 13 comments on CORSAIR HXi Series, HX850i, 850 Watt, 80+ Platinum Certified, Fully Modular - Digital Power Supply:

u/_GoToGulag_ · 43 pointsr/bapcsalescanada

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u/ant51508 · 18 pointsr/buildapc

A $500 motherboard is very expensive. paying $300 just for aesthetics on a $3300 build is a lot. OP could also have saved over $100 on the ram.

The PSU is overkill too, the 1080 has a 180W TDP and the 5820K a 150W TDP. 800W would be enough for two 980ti (250W each). OP could have gotten a platinum rated 850W PSU for the same price.

That said, OP plans to upgrade the strange parts of his build so it's not a big deal IMO. according to his comment his build will be about $1500 more expensive eventually, and at that point it's OK to spend so much money on a motherboard as that money could not be spent better elsewhere. It just looks a bit strange when you look at it as it is now.

u/zdelusion · 5 pointsr/buildapc

One of the biggest gains you can make noise wise is with the PSU. You have 2 options, you can go with a passive PSU, as another guy mentioned Seasonic makes a few. The other option is to go with a super overkill PSU that has a "Zero RPM" mode at low power draw (all the time with your system). Something like the Corsair HXI850i. Another perk of overspending on a PSU is they'll last for like 10 years and multiple upgrades if you get a nice enough one.

Edit: You can spend less on a lower end one, like the Corsair SF series but I think if noise is a big concern then overspending on the PSU is probably the best bet.

u/catcoin_miner · 4 pointsr/VoskCoin

It's not a very good time to be buying GPU's, the prices are still going down and there are new nvidia's on the horizon, but since you asked...

  • Ausu b250 mining expert. $140 No brainer, best mining board out right now.
  • i3 Processor. $120 I'm a big fan of the g4400 for linux builds, but being able to run windows is required for some coins/cards right now.
  • 8 gig ram. $80. Split between 2 linux builds use both sticks for windows.
  • Your favorite PSU. I like the Corsair HXi series. $180. You can use 3 PSU's with the mobo, so expanding is possible, but not optimal obviously.
  • Risers $100
  • 13 used GTX750 1Gig. $555.62. Make sure you don't buy the fakeedoos.

    That leaves you about $125 for presents for Mrs. Vosk and Tails. You will be running about 3.3-3.5kh/s on cryptonight/V7 @ about 500+watts or about 1ksol/s (I think?) on equihash. About $6 worth of monero/day at this instant.

    When the new Nvidia cards come out, ebay the 750's or throw them away as you replace them with 1180's.
u/HappyButPrivate · 2 pointsr/MSI_Gaming

Just built a new system with a 3900x, I went a bit higher with the Corsair 850 HXi. I liked the digital control but I think the HX is the same but without the digital control.
CORSAIR HXi Series, HX850i, 850...
https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B00M2UIXX2

I'm a tech for (hate to admit) 49 years. Go cheap on other things, not the power supply... And ALWAYS run it on a UPS, not some cheap ass surge protector. :-)

u/Tylertooo · 2 pointsr/buildapc

That will be a god tier PC. Deserves a god-tier PSU: The Corsair HX850i

u/TheMrSanta · 1 pointr/techsupport

Oh right, also i changed my power supply from a 1000 watt that came with the computer, to an 850 watt one, but when i checked to see if my pc could support a lower one, it said it would run fine. Would swapping back to the previous one fix the issue?

This one: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00M2UIXX2/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

Would it be able to support a 1080 ti? When i researched it it said it would.

u/NazKer · 1 pointr/PcMasterRaceBuilds

I just built a PC with a i9-9900k and a 2080 Super. It’s a beast, I’m very happy with it.

So naturally, I’d definitely recommend a 2080 or a 2080 super. Especially if you plan on using an ultrawide monitor.

If you find a regular 2080 for a good price, go for it. It dropped a bit in price, so it’s a good deal. But if you’re willing to spend a little more coin, the 2080 super for the little bit of extra performance isn’t a bad choice either.

PSU:
Please whatever you do, make sure to not skimp on power supplies. You want a high quality PSU to ensure every component is getting adequate power and that the power is fed from a well engineered unit.

Personally, I am using a CORSAIR HXi Series, HX850i, 850 Watt, 80+ Platinum Certified PSU . It is a very nice PSU, but the price is a little high for it. I’d probably recommend this one if you have an existing Corsair eco system, since it’d fit right in, or just as an enthusiast purchase.

Otherwise, my PSU recommendation for you would be an EVGA SuperNOVA 850 G+, 80 Plus Gold 850W . Well built, 10 year warranty, and a reasonable price. Very good pick.

750w is enough, but I personally like the little bit of extra headroom with the 850 power supplies. The more headroom you have, the quieter and longer your PSU will live. Also having extra could be useful for future proofing. Just a peace of mind thing.

u/Mimtos · 1 pointr/buildapc

Sounds great! No not really sorry :c, this configurator is all I can recommend. The boys over at /r/waterclocking will be much more helpful. I've done some research and you're looking at 500-700 for parts with maintenance every 6 months. I also recommend you learning to do it yourself unless you're okay with the money spending. I think it's 200-400 labor fees for the initial setup(depending on the complexity of your build) and 100$ every 6 month maintenance to flush out and check everything. Be sure you know what you're getting into with a custom loop, it's not an install and forget piece.

I also recommend you change your current PSU to this. It's platinum certified compared to the gold certified rmx. Also the i in the product name means it's icue compatible which will allow you to control the PSU and its voltages from your computer, not sure how important it is for an average user but it's for the same price so why not. The quality and warranty(10 years) of the PSU's are the same though so don't worry. RM series only go up to gold whereas HX can go up to plat. Usually the HX is considered above the RM series but right below Corsair's flagship PSUs, AX series.

u/PriceKnight · 1 pointr/bapcsalescanada

Price History


  • Corsair HXi Series, HX850i, 850 Watt (850W), Fully Modular Power   ^PureLink
    ReviewMeta: ★★★★✮ 4.3/5 from 2824 valid reviews
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