3.5 - Computer Power Flashcards
1
Q
WARNING
A
- Always disconnect from the power source when
working on a device
– Always. Seriously.
– Some devices store a charge in capacitors
– Know how to discharge before touching - Never connect your body to any part
of an electrical system
– Do not connect yourself to the
ground wire of an electrical system - Respect electricity
– It does not respect you
2
Q
Computer power supply
A
- Computer uses DC voltage
– Most power sources provide AC voltage - Convert 120 V AC or 240 V AC
– To 3.3 V DC, 5 V DC, and 12 V DC - You’ll know when this isn’t working
– An important component
3
Q
Amp and volt
A
- Ampere (amp, A) – The rate of electron flow
past a point in one second
– The diameter of the hose - Voltage (volt, V)Electrical “pressure”
pushing the electrons
– How open the faucet is
4
Q
Power
A
- Watt (W) – Measurement of real power use
– volts * amps = watts
– 120V * 0.5A = 60W
5
Q
Current
A
- Alternating current (AC)
– Direction of current constantly reverses
– Distributes electricity efficiently over long distances
– Frequency of this cycle is important
– US/Canada – 110 to 120 volts of AC (VAC), 60 hertz (Hz)
– Europe – 220-240 VAC, 50 Hz - Direct current (DC)
– Current moves in one direction with a constant voltage
6
Q
Dual-voltage input options
A
- Voltage varies by country
– US/Canada – 120 volts of AC (VAC), 60 hertz (Hz)
– Europe – 230 VAC, 50 Hz - Manually switch between 120 V and 230 V
– Get your meter!
– Or use an auto-switching power supply - Don’t plug a 120 V power supply into
a 230 V power source!
7
Q
Power supply output
A
- Different voltages
– For different components - Positive and negative voltage
– Voltage is a difference in potential
– The electrical ground is a common reference point
– Depends on where you measure from - At the front door of your house
– The second floor is +10 feet
– The basement is -10 feet - +12 V
– PCIe adapters, hard drive motors, cooling fans,
most modern components - +5 V
– Some motherboard components
– Many components are now using +3.3 V - +3.3 V
– M.2 slots, RAM slots, motherboard logic circuits - +5 VSB
– Standby voltage - -12 V
– Integrated LAN
– Older serial ports
– Some PCI cards - -5 V
– Available for ISA adapter cards
– Most cards didn’t use it
– Today’s motherboards
don’t have ISA slots
8
Q
24-pin motherboard power
A
- Main motherboard power
– Provides +3.3 V, +/-5 V, and +/- 12 V - 20 pin connector was the original ATX standard
– 24 pin was added for PCI Express power - You can connect a 24-pin connector to
a 20-pin motherboard
– Some cables are 20-pin + 4-pin
9
Q
Redundant power supplies
A
- Two (or more) power supplies
– Internal to the server - Each power supply can handle 100% of the load
– Would normally run at 50% of the load - Hot-swappable
– Replace a faulty power supply without
powering down
10
Q
Power supply connectors
A
- Fixed connectors
– Connected to the power supply
– May have too many connectors
– May not have enough - Modular
– Add cables as needed
– Fewer leftover wires,better airflow
– A bit more expensive
11
Q
Sizing a power supply
A
- Power supplies are rated by watts
– Overall and by individual voltages - Bigger isn’t necessarily better
– More expensive
– Doesn’t speed up your computer - Physical size is relatively standard
– Older cases and systems may have proprietary sizes - Calculate the watts required for all components
– CPU, storage devices, video adapter
– Many online calculators - Video adapters are usually the largest power draw
– Many video card specifications list a recommended
power supply wattage - 50% capacity is a good rule of thumb
– Power supply runs efficiently and there’s room to grow