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Building a new Gaming PC
(midwest.social)
Gaming on the GNU/Linux operating system.
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GPUs got a lot bigger and more power-hungry. So you need to check the PSU and it's 8/16 pin GPU connector as well as space in the case.
I always tend to over size my power supplies. I ran my own wiring in my house, so I actually have access to 220V power there! I bought a LR-30 to C13 power cord a while back (https://www.amazon.com/NEMA-L6-30P-C13-Power-Cord/dp/B004WODG6A/) so I could run my PC on 220V. I'm not sure it actually saves me anything, but I like the idea of having my electrical panel balanced a little better.
I was a bit confused reading your comment, given that the vast majority of the world has 220V everywhere ๐
But actually a ATX PSU steps down the the power to 12V anyway, so I doubt 110V or 220V makes much of a difference.
Supposedly 220V is a little more efficient to step down than 110V? I've read a lot of articles about data mining where they run the mining rigs off of 220V in the USA instead of 110V and they gain something like 5% efficiency. They're doing it with entire shipping containers full of PCs though. On my single PC, I'm not sure I can tell the difference at all. But I'm an Electrical Engineer by trade, so it makes me feel better that I'm more power efficient and have my panel balanced. I was running the 220V for my server rack anyway, so it wasn't a lot of effort to pull one more circuit for my Desktop PC.