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The unit

The Giant Reactor is a simple all-black unit but aesthetically appealing nevertheless. It is certainly much better than a grey or silver unit and will look nice in almost any kind of case. Unfortunately for the hardcore modders, this is not a modular unit. The entire rear part of the unit is perforated, allowing a steady airflow through the back of the case. There is only a simple on/off switch and a power LED, which lights up red when the PSU is powered on. At the side of the unit one can find the sticker with all the basic specifications of the unit and the certifications it received.

The cooling of the Giant Reactor is completely dependent on a single giant 135mm fan. The fan itself generates a generous amount of airflow but is slow spinning; therefore it won’t create excessive amounts of noise. The fan is thermally controlled and almost entirely silent while the unit is under normal load. The airflow from the fan works as an exhaust for the entire system, as it pushes all the air towards the back of the case.


As you probably have noticed by now, the cables of the Giant Reactor are sleeved which is a must for any quality PSU nowadays. Unfortunately the cables are sleeved up to the first connector only, leaving the remaining cables exposed and thus considerably decreasing the aesthetics factor of the unit. You will find eight Molex connectors, one floppy connector, one 12V CPU 4/8 pin connector, four PCIe 12V connectors (two of which are 8-pin), eight SATA connectors and one 24-pin ATX 2.1 connector.

The interior of the Giant Reactor is clean and tidy; in some ways too tidy for a 1KW unit. The few components and short heatsinks barely fill up half of the space in the chassis, while not even a year back 700-800W units where up to 1.5 inch longer than regular ATX units in order to fit the necessary components inside. But the evolution of power electronics allowed the production of much stronger and efficient AC to DC rectifiers which can convert even more power combined with a lower energy loss. Still, the heatsinks of the Giant Reactor appear rather small, even for a unit claiming 80% efficiency; it seems to depend a lot on the airflow from the massive 135mm fan.

 

 

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