OCZ ModXStream Pro 600W

Published on March 02, 2009
Written by Michael Larabel
Page 1 of 3
Discuss This Article

Last month we looked at the OCZ Fatal1ty 700W which performed very well and was another nice power supply from OCZ Technology, the company that also owns PC Power & Cooling. Another one of their power supplies to have been introduced in the past few months is the ModXStream-Pro 600W. Unlike the Fatal1ty series, the ModXStream Pro series has modular cables and a few other differences, while still being 80+ Certified, NVIDIA SLI Certified, and is backed by OCZ's excellent PowerSwap warranty. In this review we are testing out the OCZ ModXStream Pro 600W for ourselves.

Features:

- Available in 500W, 600W, 700W Configurations
- OCZ PowerWhipser Technology
- Internal 140mm Fan
- SLI Certified
- 3 year OCZ PowerSwap Warranty
- EZMod Technology
- ATX12V v2.2 and EPS12V
- 80+ Certified
- Active PFC
- MTBF 100,000 hours

Contents:

The ModXStream Pro packaging is faintly similar to that of other OCZ power supply packages we have looked at in the past. The red and black ModXStream Pro container highlights various features of this power supply such as its SLI readiness, 3-year warranty, and EZMod cable management. The box comes complete with a plastic handle to make it easy for transport. Inside there was the ModXStream Pro user manual, US AC power cable, the power supply itself (wrapped in plastic), and a bag that contained all of the modular cables for the power supply unit.

<< Previous Page
1
Latest Hardware Reviews
  1. Sumo Lounge Emperor
  2. Gallium3D Continues Improving OpenGL For Older Radeon GPUs
  3. 15-Way Open vs. Closed Source NVIDIA/AMD Linux GPU Comparison
  4. Nouveau vs. NVIDIA Linux Comparison Shows Shortcomings
Latest Software Articles
  1. Btrfs vs. EXT4 vs. XFS vs. F2FS On Linux 3.10
  2. AMD Radeon R600 GPU LLVM 3.3 Back-End Testing
  3. F2FS File-System Shows Regressions On Linux 3.10
  4. Previewing The Radeon Gallium3D Shader Optimizations
Latest Linux News
  1. Benchmarking The Intel P-State, CPUfreq Changes
  2. FreeBSD Still Working On Next-Gen Package Manager
  3. DNF Still Advancing As Experimental Yum For Fedora
  4. Logitech Begins Supporting Linux Users
  5. Modern Intel Gallium3D Driver Still Being Toyed With
  6. Linux 3.10 Kernel Benchmarks On A Core i7 Laptop
  7. GCC 4.8.1 Compiler Due To Be Out Next Week
  8. Linux 3.10 Kernel Benchmarks For Intel Ivy Bridge
  9. Linux's "Ondemand" Governor Is No Longer Fit
  10. Firefox 22 Beta Enables WebRTC Support
  11. OpenSUSE 13.1 Milestone 1 Released
Latest Forum Talk
  1. Logitech Begins Supporting Linux Users
  2. DRM Moves Ahead With HTML5 Specification
  3. Benchmarking The Intel P-State, CPUfreq Changes
  4. Modern Intel Gallium3D Driver Still Being Toyed...
  5. DNF Still Advancing As Experimental Yum For Fedora
  6. Openbenchmarking.org main page is damaged
  1. Computers
  2. Display Drivers
  3. Graphics Cards
  4. Motherboards
  5. Peripherals
  6. Processors
  7. Software
  8. Operating Systems
  9. All Articles
  1. Linux Benchmarking
  2. OpenBenchmarking.org
  3. Phoronix Test Suite