External Appearance

Rosewill went with the common "black goes with everything" approach for their Quark series units. The otherwise simple chassis is sprayed with a textured black paint that creates a sandstone-like visual effect. Instead of installing a removable finger guard, Rosewill cut the top cover to resemble a warped spider's web. There are no stickers or decorations on the sides of the chassis, the sticker with the specifications of the PSUs is placed at the top side of the units. The three most powerful Quark PSUs share the same exact chassis, while the 750W version is only slightly shorter.

 

The rear side of the PSUs is relatively uninteresting, with just a typical on/off switch and an AC power cable connector to be found there. Perhaps the only noteworthy observation is that the 750W unit has a smaller switch, as the larger units naturally have to cope with a larger input current.

While it is not strange for the rear side of these PSUs to be very similar, their front sides are peculiarly identical as well. All of the units share the same number of connectors, even though the smaller units do not come with enough cables for them. All of the connectors are black, with the exception of the PCI-Express connectors, which are blue. There are also six self-test LEDs near the top, five for the main voltage lines and one for the "Power Good" signal. These can be used to diagnose basic PSU issues.

Internal Design

Another difference between the 750W Quark and the more powerful versions is the fan. The 750W version has a Yate Loon D14BH-12 fan installed, a very powerful 140 mm fan, with a ball bearing engine and a maximum rotational speed of 2800 RPM. For the more powerful models, Rosewill went with a slightly smaller Young Lin Tech model, the DFS132512H, a 135 mm fan with a "hybrid" self-lubricating bearing and a maximum rotational speed of just 1700 PRM. Why Rosewill is installing such a powerful fan in the smaller models eludes us, as units capable of 80Plus Platinum efficiency with such a power output do not require these levels of airflow.

A glance on the insides of the Quark series PSUs instantly reveals that the 750W version is based on a similar, yet different platform than the rest. All are made by Enhance Electronics, with the 750W based on the 13XX Platinum platform and the more powerful units on the boosted 13XX Platinum GT platform. The 750W version has similar but notably smaller heatsinks and main transformer, while the secondary conversion stage MOSFETs can be seen from the top side of the main PCB, next to the transformer. The three larger PSUs have a larger secondary side heatsink and the secondary conversion MOSFETs are placed underneath the main PCB.

There is virtually no design difference between the 850W, 1000W and 1200W PSUs. Only the size and suppliers of the components change, with the mere exception that the 850W PSU has one input bridge rectifier and the larger units have two, with an extra smaller heatsink sandwiched between them.

The filtering stage of the 750W version consists of four Y capacitors, two X capacitors, two filtering inductors and a surge suppression MOV. Panasonic supplies the APFC 450V/560μF capacitor and all of the secondary side electrolytic capacitors come from Nippon Chemi-Con. Teapo supplies the polymer capacitors.

Enhance boosted the filtering stage of the 850W-1200W units slightly by adding two extra X capacitors. Rosewill's choice of component suppliers with these three models is very messy, hinting that the company is using whichever supplier is available and cost-effective at the time. The 850W version has its 420V/330μF primary capacitors supplied by Matsushita, its secondary side electrolytics are a mix of Nichicon, Unicon, Nippon Chemi-Con and Rubicon products, with Teapo supplying the polymers. The 1000W version came with two Nippon Chemi-Con 450V/390μF APFC capacitors, a mix of Nichicon, Unicon, Nippon Chemi-Con and Rubicon electrolytic capacitors, with Teapo and Dura Tech supplying the electrolytics. Finally, the 1200W version comes with Matsushita 420V/470μF APFC capacitors, a mix of Unicon, Nippon Chemi-Con, Nichicon and Dura Tech electrolytics, and another mix of Teapo, Nichicon and Dura Tech polymer capacitors. 

Introduction, Packaging & Bundle Cold Test Results
Comments Locked

34 Comments

View All Comments

  • Sivar - Wednesday, January 13, 2016 - link

    The Rosewill Silent Night is among the finest power supplies ever manufactured.
    Of course, it was manufactured by SuperFlower, the only company I'd put on par with Seasonic in terms of quality. You are probably referring to some other line of Rosewill.
    Fanless and runs my 6-core i7, 970GTX, and five hard drives without the slightest voltage drop.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Wednesday, January 13, 2016 - link

    Then not only are you missing out, you are also missing the point. Rosewill is not the one you should avoid, but rather, the OEM of the internals is the one to avoid. A lot of PSUs sold use one of several OEM models, and the ones used now are pretty good.
  • cosmotic - Wednesday, January 13, 2016 - link

    "Seasonic's infamous SS-1200XP3"

    Is there something wrong with the Seasonic? How is it infamous?
  • bigboxes - Wednesday, January 13, 2016 - link

    Infamous is not an indicator of something bad. It just means that it's a noted product. That could be for it's stellar performance or simply what it's known for.
  • bji - Wednesday, January 13, 2016 - link

    You're wrong.

    infamous: well known for some bad quality or deed.

    The author used the word incorrectly, but apparently a percentage of the readership won't know the difference so ... the downward spiral of the English language continues!
  • jbrizz - Wednesday, January 13, 2016 - link

    It was known for being badass, baby.
  • E.Fyll - Wednesday, January 13, 2016 - link

    Oh, there is absolutely nothing wrong with the Seasonic model. The original word was "influential", I did not really felt that it was suitable and I replaced it during my second pass. Apparently, I messed up while editing the text by either not deleting the word completely and the auto-correct function completing the new word as "infamous" or by just subconsciously getting influenced by the "in" prefix of the original word. Anyhow, of course the correct word is "famous".

    Thank you for your notice, it has been fixed.
  • Oxford Guy - Friday, January 22, 2016 - link

    Unlike their 1050 model which could be "heard from rooms away." Now that one was infamous.
  • Voldenuit - Wednesday, January 13, 2016 - link

    Who names a PSU 'Quark'?

    'Lepton' would make more sense; electrons have no quarks.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Wednesday, January 13, 2016 - link

    I have the 1000 watt model, and it is a beautiful PSU, simple, powerful, and silent. The only issue is the cables are rediculously stiff, even in my full atx case, it took quite a bit of force to manipulate them down so they wouldnt butt against the case. No other model has ever had such stiff cables in my experience.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now