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 1. Home
 2. News


FSP OFFERS 2000W POWER SUPPLY FOR UPCOMING NVIDIA, AMD GPUS

By Zhiye Liu published 11 days ago

Feeding even the most power-hungry GPUs

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Comments (10)

Cannon Pro 2000W (Image credit: FSP)


FSP has launched the the Cannon Pro 2000W, a PSU meant to feed Nvidia and AMD's
next-generation products that will vie for a spot on the list of best graphics
cards. The new power supply is already available on Amazon for $499.99.



Initially tailored to cryptocurrency miners, FSP's Cannon Pro 2000W offers 18
6+2-pin PCIe power connectors. FSP is promising stable, simultaneous operation
for a maximum of nine graphics cards. However, now that modern graphics cards,
such as the GeForce RTX 3090 Ti (Ampere) with its rumored 450W TDP are consuming
more power, the Cannon Pro 2000W could serve a higher purpose. Although the
power supply doesn't have any 12VHPWR power connectors, there are more than
enough regular PCIe power connectors for those 3x8-pin to 12VHPWR power
adapters.



The Cannon Pro 2000W clings to the standard ATX form factor with dimensions of
200 x 150 x 86mm. The power supply features the 80 Plus Gold certification,
ensuring 87% efficiency at 100% load, 90% efficiency at 50% load, and 87%
efficiency at 20% load. The Cannon Pro 2000W utilizes a single rail design and
delivers up to 2000W with a small caveat. The unit tops out at 1200W with a 100V
- 115V input and 1500W with a 115V to 200V input. Therefore, to exploit the
power supply's maximum 2000W capacity, you need a 200V to 240V input.



Image 1 of 2Image 2 of 2



Cannon Pro 2000W (Image credit: FSP)



Cannon Pro 2000W (Image credit: FSP)
Image 1 of 2



Cannon Pro 2000W (Image credit: FSP)
Image 2 of 2



Cannon Pro 2000W (Image credit: FSP)

As you would expect from any high-end power supply, the Cannon Pro 2000W boasts
a DC to DC module design, Active PFC ≧ 0.9, quality Japanese electrolytic
capacitors, and your usual cocktail of protections, including OVP, OCP, UVP,
SCP, OPP, and OTP. As a result, FSP rates the Cannon Pro 2000W for 92%
efficiency at a typical load and hold up time more than 17ms at full load.

The Cannon Pro 2000W depends on a 135mm dual-ball bearing fan for active
cooling. It also utilizes an entirely modular design, so consumers only need to
plug in the cables they need, which helps ease installation and cable management
and improve cooling performance.



FSP doesn't specify the warranty period for the Cannon Pro 2000W on the power
supply's product page.


Zhiye Liu

Freelance News Writer

Zhiye Liu is a Freelance News Writer at Tom’s Hardware US. Although he loves
everything that’s hardware, he has a soft spot for CPUs, GPUs, and RAM.




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Topics
Power Supplies
Components
See all comments (10)


10 Comments Comment from the forums
 * mac_angel
   Yea, I was about to comment that most homes in North America can't support
   that. Sadly, the way most homes are built, they can't even support 2 gaming
   computers in the bedrooms running at the same time.
   Reply
 * Murissokah
   
   Reply
 * hotaru.hino
   > mac_angel said:
   > Yea, I was about to comment that most homes in North America can't support
   > that. Sadly, the way most homes are built, they can't even support 2 gaming
   > computers in the bedrooms running at the same time.
   
   240V circuits can be created in North American homes. You usually find these
   for high powered appliances or electric vehicle chargers....
   Read More Reply
 * Neilbob
   2 kilowatts seems to be pushing it slightly. Even with the most powerful CPUs
   and GPUs, I can't see how any consumer can even come close to that level of
   usage, outside of the most outlandish (and cough pointless) overclocking
   scenarios.
   Reply
 * salgado18
   > Murissokah said:
   
   i9-12900KS with RTX 3090ti should saturate it with a mild overclock.
   
   Jokes aside, this thing could power three full systems if it had the
   connections. I bet sales were hit by crypto slowing down, and now they want
   to sell it to whoever wants the absolute best of the best.
   Reply
 * Krotow
   These PSU must come with built in water cooler and water inlet and outlet
   pipes. For use in home heating assembly. And probably entire PC must be built
   in this way.
   Reply
 * Murissokah
   > salgado18 said:
   > i9-12900KS with RTX 3090ti should saturate it with a mild overclock.
   > 
   > Jokes aside, this thing could power three full systems if it had the
   > connections. I bet sales were hit by crypto slowing down, and now they want
   > to sell it to whoever wants the absolute best of the best.
   
   
   I guess it's for people with...
   Read More Reply
 * mac_angel
   > hotaru.hino said:
   > 240V circuits can be created in North American homes. You usually find
   > these for high powered appliances or electric vehicle chargers.
   
   "can be created". But my comment was that most homes in North America cannot
   support it. Most homes, especially the ones built in the past 15 years or so,
   have the bedrooms all sharing a single 15amp...
   Read More Reply
 * hotaru.hino
   > mac_angel said:
   > "can be created". But my comment was that most homes in North America
   > cannot support it. Most homes, especially the ones built in the past 15
   > years or so, have the bedrooms all sharing a single 15amp breaker, and the
   > lights on a separate breaker. Something I've had problems with in the past
   > because it meant that...
   
   Read More Reply
 * Ogotai
   > hotaru.hino said:
   > 240V circuits can be created in North American homes
   
   
   you seem to be forgetting one important detail. north American homes, run on
   120v, less a few major appliances, aka stove and clothes dryer, not 240v. so
   that would mean the things that dont auto adjust for the voltage change,
   would be fried if plugged into a 240v...
   Read More Reply
 * View All 10 Comments

Show more comments

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