
Cables are flexible and easy to install.

-Perfect for 5080, 5070 Ti, 5070! -Good quality cables ; great durability -Low noise fan!

Great for a RTX 5070 and very efficient. It makes no noise in light or medium power consumption mode. (The fan doesn't move.) I got it at a very good price for that power outage (90$ CAD). It does have a good warranty (That I wouldn't want to have to use).

Great PSU solid good performance

Arrived on time, great customer service.

-No issue seen when first and after installing it -Powers my Power Color Reaper 9070xt fine -Rated 80Gold -Fairly Priced

- Good power for standard ATX - ATX 3.1 Compatible - All the cables you need

Comes with all the cables that you need Fan knob on the back for user control Easy to understand where cables go

Solid build Has enough wiring for almost every user out there Has 3 x 8 pin Pcie plus 1 600w cable

Clean Easy install Full modular individual cables 12v power cable for gpu has green connection ends so you can tell its fully plugged in.

Own multiple original SF750s and they have been the most amazing PSUs I ever used in SFF builds. With the ceiling constantly being raised on power draw for GPU's, 850-1000W are like slowly becoming the standard. As unfortunate as that is, if you're going to pick a PSU up that can deliver, then the SF850/SF1000 are the kings in that arena if you build a lot in ITX/SFF, Micro ATX builds. Sorry, but nothing else comes close in terms of sheer reliability, noise, thermal profiles, and quality.

- Build quality is on par with Corsairs other products. I still have some that are nearing a decade old, as crazy as that is. (Not with the RM850x, though. See Con #1.) - Zero-RPM fan mode is great, and a good offset for the fluid dynamic bearing fan, which Id guess isnt a ML-line quality or anything, and they also employ specially calculated fan curves (like I do in my motherboards BIOS and in EVGA Precision X1) I barely felt the airflow during my stress test, and it stayed under 50C at 50% load. - The fan curve for the RM850X is: 0RPM for 0% to 40% system load, 425RPM and 4dBA for 50% to 80% load; 680RPM and 18.2dBa@90% load; 900RPM and 25.1dBa@100% load (for comparison, a human whisper is 25dBa, or decibels-per-ampere). - Modular PSUs make it nice to be able to exclude cables I dont need for less clutter! - The purported efficiency profile is best for a 50% load, at 91.1%, and 100% load is 88.12% efficiency, per the spec sheet. I dont have a load-tester, but I do have an ATX breakout board modified with a larger-current fuse, and Im very tempted to pull it back out of my rig and test this efficiency rating and noise efficiency of the caps with a 750W audio amplifier and matched Skar Audio subwoofers. Thats something I can see on the oscilloscope, too. - The ports and connectors are a smaller interface compared to the older model. (I welcome it, though it does start the trend of a whole box of old PSU cables becoming obsolete.) - Ive recorded vocals with my AKG C214 condenser mic into Audacity via USB audio interfaces and (a Behringer mixer and Motu M4). Listening back on my AKG Q701s and Presonus studio monitors, it sounds absolutely clean on the digital storage and reproduction side. No coil whine so far with this one. - The overall size is slightly smaller and shorter, so theres now a rodent-sized crawl-space under my case where a bundle of wires used to be stuffed. Yay for airflow. But that header location for the power cables is not the best implementation, IMO. - The opening MSRP for this product is competitive and provides value, considering economic inflation. If there is any coil whine in the next ten years, then call Corsair! - That 10-year warranty alone is worth the MSRP. Consumers pay considerably more for such extended warranties at big-box stores. - ATX 3.0 and PCIe5, baybayyyy! Ive been holding off on a GPU upgrade because of Nvidias shenanigans, but Im going to aim for a next-gen contender for GDDR7. Like if EVGA and Intel ARC were to rescue one another. - Transparency: I have to slide this one in, but this is a pretty nice product overall, and Corsair published a reviewers guide linked in the press release for this product that seems as close to a datasheet as we could expect. I get the vibe that they sincerely try to engineer superior products for us weebs and geeks, and it shows in their customer participation and image. There are a few brands like that across tech. Im glad we still have it, and that everything hasnt turned into whatever comes out of Shenzhen.

Decent amount of cable options 80+ gold Smallish size Affordable

It is a power supply and I have had very few issues with them. The output seems to be at the numbers as advertised.

Reasonably priced, nicely finished PSU. Aside from the issue mentioned under "Cons" the balance of Montech's description is accurate with regard to the PSU's dimensions and cable length. Fan is as-depicted; black, seven-bladed, and was found to be very quiet. The cables are indeed flat and very pliable. Simply speaking for myself, I prefer these over the bundled and braided variety. The unneeded Molex cable folded-up upon itself neatly, and then it was easy to stash away.

It is small, tight but really strong, you cant believe that it can go up to 1000w! Besides, it is super quiet, I love the way it works.

2 years ago I bought a pre-built gaming computer with a RTX 3060. From the start it crashed during heavy game play. I replaced a few parts and even sent the GPU back for a replacement. Nothing fixed it and I just assumed that crashing once or twice a day was normal. Ever since upgrading with this power supply about a month ago, I've had zero crashes.

Runs well and has the plugs you need to do lost anything

- Great price for the quality level of this power supply - Cables provide all power connectors that I would ever want for a new build - The size of the power supply meets the needs for my micro-atx case.

- Biggest pro is the price - Quiet - Black cables (some cheaper psus wont do this)