Legit Power Supply Reviews

SkyHawk PowerONE 620w Review **UPDATE 3/26**

Manufacturer: Skyhawk Group
Product: PowerONE 570w modular power supply
Date: Sun, Mar 06, 2005 - 12:00 AM
Written By: Yves Toleno -
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Testing

I tested the SkyHawk PowerONE power supply on the following setup using a multimeter, motherboard monitor, and my sound pressure level meter.

  • Abit NF7-S rev. 2
  • AMD 2500+ mobile @ 2.275ghz
  • 512mb Kingmax PC4000
  • Matrox G450 Video
  • 2x 160GB Seagate SATA hard drives
  • 120GB Western Digital hard drive
  • Sony 8x DVD/RW
  • 2x 120mm case fans


All voltages were taken from the ATX power connector and compared with voltages reported from Motherboard Monitor 5. They were taken without load (no computer connected), after the computer had idled for 30min, and again after 30min at full load. Load was achieved by defragmenting the Western Digital hard drive while rendering a 5min film in Vegas 4.0, and running folding@home in the background to use any spare CPU cycles. Vegas loads the system by reading large video files from a drive rendering a video effect frame by frame and then writing the frame to the hard drive again, this particular sequence taxed my system at 97-99% at all times, any remaining CPU time was used by F@H and the defrag utility.


**There have been no changes to my Socket A test bed and as such the results from the OCZ PowerStream tests are directly comparable with the new results from the SkyHawk PowerONE**


The SkyHawk PowerONE proves quickly that it does not take $140 to get a solid 3.3v rail. The PowerONE exhibited almost no voltage fluctuation under all three different test situations. The PowerONE’s voltages were also with in the OCZ personal bubble only differing by at most .06v and at lest .03v. The SkyHawk PowerONE also like the OCZ showed no change in voltage from idle to full load.

The PowerONE again demonstrates its stability and top quality voltage regulation. The PowerONE again differs by only hundredths of a volt and shows no change from idle to full load. It even beats the OCZ when going from no load to idle, showing only a .03v increase in voltage to the OCZ .06v increase.

When it comes to SkyHawk’s 12v regulation we see one of the largest changes and even that is still under a tenth of a volt, the change from no load to full load is a mere .05v. Not as good as the OCZ but the OCZ PowerStream is only .02v better. I can’t say I was excited to see under 12v in Motherboard Monitor but the voltage drop is consistent with that of the OCZ, both drop around two tenths of a volt when comparing the reading I took from the multimeter to that registered by Motherboard Monitor.

Here in the final graph from testing the SkyHawk PowerONE shines. All of the PowerONE’s voltages stayed well with in spec and were regulated very well with only two exceptions, the -12v and -5v. On the -12v the PowerONE jumped from -12.06v to -12.22v when I plugged in my computer and let it idle, while no big deal it is a difference between the PowerONE and the OCZ which did not have nearly as large a change. The same sort of thing happened on to the -5v rail which went from -5.16v to -5.26 after I attached my computer and let it idle. In both cases the change from idle to full load was minimal and inline with the OCZ, all the while the vCore and vMem were rock solid. When you step back from the picture the PowerONE is looking more and more like a decent quality power supply.

When it comes to acoustics there are a few things to take into consideration. First when the PowerONE is less than 40 degrees C then the fans are off. That’s right no spinning motors, which means no noise. When the PowerONE is more than 40 degrees C then the fans start to spin up. I recorded the sound presure level at less than 35dB when the fans were not spinning and around 36.5dB when they were spinning. In the room I test in the SPL is always under 35dB which is the threshold of my testing equipment. This means that the SkyHawk PowerONE is very, very quiet even when the fans are spinning, so quiet in fact that I highly doubt you will ever notice that the fans spun up when this is in a computer case.


Next Page - Final Thoughts


Review Index
Page 1 - Specifications and Features
Page 2 - Packaging and Impressions
Page 3 - Cabling and Interior
Page 4 - Testing
Page 5 - Final Thoughts