c_hegge (in the review) wrote:This power supply’s input filtering starts at a PCB attached to the AC receptacle, with two X-Capacitors, a coil and two Y-Capacitors. The main PCB contains three X-Caps, two coils, two Y-caps and one MOV. The total component count is five X-Caps, two coils, four Y-caps and one MOV – which is plenty of components.
…1 + 2 = 2!?
Anyway, there's one common-mode choke on the main PCB, plus provision for a second (and another pair of Y-caps) that wasn't installed, and the main PCB has
four installed Y-caps (or five counting the one on the non-isolated DC bus, which is present in almost all units; of those on the AC side, one pair is between the installed choke and an X-cap and the other pair near the fuse).
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.