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Old August 5th 06, 09:14 PM posted to alt.comp.hardware.overclocking.amd,uk.comp.homebuilt,alt.comp.hardware,alt.engineering.electrical
Phat Bytestard
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Posts: 495
Default Typical mains power for mid-range PC?

On Sat, 05 Aug 2006 04:50:33 -0400, kony Gave us:

On Sat, 05 Aug 2006 05:12:24 GMT, Phat Bytestard
wrote:

On Fri, 04 Aug 2006 01:07:14 -0400, kony Gave us:

On Thu, 03 Aug 2006 04:57:56 GMT, Phat Bytestard
wrote:

On Wed, 02 Aug 2006 12:29:57 -0400, kony Gave us:

and that when it
happens rapidly it is another way to describe ripple, though
at a larger magnitude.

Bull****.

Ripple has a very specific definition, and that ain't it.

So sorry but ripple is ripple, including all causes... not
just the ones that suit your blind argument.



Ripple and noise are defined as periodic or random signals over a
frequency band of 10 Hz
to 20 MHz.

Your transient current draw CRAP is NOT ripple.


What did you expect to be this transient when it comes from
multi-MHz if not GHz chips, at least dozens of KHz
switching?

This is not like some motor that is a one-shot turn on.
These are constant variable loads that induce more rail
ripple than put out by the PSU itself.


You're an idiot.