Phanteks AMP 750 750W Power Supply Review

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Overview

The Phanteks AMP 750 packaging is interesting in that it is small, fairly basic, and just about completely black. The front of the package is bare of information save for the advertising about being fully modular, the Revolt Pro-Link Certified status (?), 10-year warranty, and the 80 Plus Gold seal. However, when we check the 80 Plus website it was not listed at the time this unit was tested. The rear of the packaging has also gone for the less is more thing, but it does have a fan noise graph, efficiency graph, and some advertising about features (including the FDB fan). The side of the package has the power label (reproduced below) and the connector count (reproduced below).

Phanteks AMP 750 Connector Types
Phanteks AMP 750 Voltage and Wattage Table

The Phanteks AMP 750 is advertised as being a single 12v rail power supply with a capacity up to 62A (or ~99% of the unit’s capacity) if necessary. The minor rails (5v and 3.3v) have a capacity of 20A each and the combined capacity of those two rails is 100W. Combined with these outputs, we find that this unit has 4 PCIe connectors, 10 SATA connectors, and 3 Molex connectors.

Once we open the Phanteks AMP 750 packaging we find the power supply, mounting screws, modular cables, the power cord, zip ties/Velcro straps, and the user manual. The user manual covers just this model over 14 pages in 14 languages. The documentation is utterly useless and some of the most incomplete we have ever seen. Indeed, it is a waste of paper and for those of you worried about your carbon footprint this is kind of like having dog poo on your footprint. Let’s move on to the unit itself now.

Paul Johnson
Paul is a long time PC hobbyist and tech enthusiast having gotten his start when he broke his first C64 quickly followed by breaking his first IBM XT. Most notably however, for 12 years, he served as the Power Supply Editor for one of the truly early, groundbreaking, and INDPENDENT PC enthusiast sites ([H]ardOCP) until its mothballing in April of 2019. Paul now brings the same flair and style of his power supply reviews to The FPS Review.

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