Tenshinai: I have been playing with Power supplies and computers longer than you have been alive.
That´s an interesting claim. Or more correctly, a blatant and arrogant lie. Not to mention that it´s a pathetic use of a logical fallacy.
The first standardised PSU came in 1981(anything before that effectively becomes irrelevant as designs and implementations varied wildly).
I was plenty well and alive by that time.
I also helped my older brother solder his own homebuild PSU for his Acorn Atom(as his many added PCBs caused the original PSU to fail) just a year or two later.
Maybe it is an English translation thing
Nope, i think the problem lies with you not knowing quite as much as you want to think.
For the last 10-15 years, there literally is not a bad power supply able to be purchased by a consumer.
Are you for real?
I mean seriously, *ROFLMAO!!!*
So why don´t you tell us all then, why the production line of some specific low quality companies churn out cheap PSUs, 20% of which are dead within the year, and 5% of which has killed the computer they were powering in that same time?
Meanwhile, the numbers for a halfdecent production line is less than 1% and less than 0.1%, and effectively, completely nonexistant from a high quality model(essentially a high quality model isn´t going to fail within a year without some kind of outside influence).
And those numbers are based on real ones even if they´re not 100% precision perfect. Just close enough for a simple comparison.
You are probably mistaking PS and MB ripple power attenuation.
Not really no. Poor motherboard design is bad enough, but if you also use a poor PSU at the same time, things wont work well(or might just fail completely).
So, whatever "failures" you are seeing in computers, are probably the MB inadequate capacitors.
Yeah, because motherboard caps SOOO often causes PSUs to catch fire, lol. Seen it happen. The motherboard in those cases were completely fine when provided with a working PSU.
The only thing you keep proving with your posts is that you don´t know anything.
The johnnyguru site was mentioned, why don´t you go there and check what rates PSUs on, might give you a few amazing insights and some valuable knowledge.