Some hope for a review of an MPT-301 remains, as I have one that appears to work normally. This one has the Auriga brand with a green logo (for the version with the better casing; the version with the other casing has a blue logo, and the ATX9806B-P has, rather fittingly, a red logo). There are two other nits that I can think of to pick with the series ‒ they didn't seem to pay any attention to positioning vertically mounted resistors as the silkscreen indicates (with the resistor body often on the wrong side), and the earth connections in some of the original 80mm-fan units (including this one) lack tooth washers and rely on only the locking screw heads to keep them in place (at least, when they switched to 120mm fans, they made the earth connection more solid). Neither of these is that big of a deal (probably the biggest one mentioned is the downgraded fuse in later generations), but I thought it worth mentioning anyway.
The ATX9806B-P (which I've only seen with the Auriga brand, red logo) is rather wimpy in comparison to the MPT series (even more so compared to the later generations). The rating given is 300W, which looks too much to ask. The mains wires here are only single-insulated (except for the one from the first stage of the EMI filter to the main switch) and the two earth wires were squeezed into a single eyelet connector (instead of using a separate one for each wire), the fuse is a glass type soldered to the PCB, and the main PCB has 1kV ceramic caps instead of Y2 types
. Four 2A diodes make up the primary rectifier (this would suffice for a 200W unit on 230V, but that's about it), and the primary capacitors here are only 470µF. The main switchers are 2SC4242s (7A) vs. at least 2SC2625s (10A) in the MPT series, and both heatsinks are much smaller. The main, drive, and standby transformers are EI-33, EE-16 and EEL-16 respectively, vs. ERL-35, EEL-16 and EEL-19 in the MPT series. The secondary rectifiers are an SBL1640CT for +3.3V, an SBL3040PT for +5V, and an STPR1020CT for +12V, all of which are
just enough for the label ratings (14A/30A/10A respectively). The secondary capacitors are a single 2200µF 16V 13mm each on +3.3V and +12V and a combination of two 1000µF 16V and one 2200µF 10V (all 10mm) on +5V (no ferrite coils on any main rail); the low-current rails have the same configuration as in the MPT series. The fan is a sleeve bearing Power Logic as usually used in the MPT series, and is probably the most decent part of the unit.
Information is far more fragile than the HDDs it's stored on. Being an afterthought is no excuse for a bad product.
My PC: Core i3 4130 on GA‑H87M‑D3H with GT640 OC 2GiB and 2 * 8GiB Kingston HyperX 1600MHz, Kingston SA400S37120G and WD3003FZEX‑00Z4SA0, Pioneer BDR‑209DBKS and Optiarc AD‑7200S, Seasonic G‑360, Chenbro PC31031, Linux Mint Cinnamon 20.3.