I did a bit of research into this myself a while back, indeed I think I posted a topic on these very forums.
Anyway, picked up another power meter wall plug thingy the other day and did some tests. My system, when pushed in either gaming or the Heaven benchmark, pulls around 530w in total, not too bad considering it's an overclocked 2500k (so not as power efficient as the newer Ivy B. etc.) with a pair of GTX 680's - 2500k is @ 4.6 currently and the 680's are at 1200/7000.
The BIG thing, well at least for me, is this is power draw from the wall for the entire system - i.e. monitor etc. as well - so there are other things plugged in to the socket being measured too, here's a list:
- The PC components above plus 3x 120mm fans.
- 24" Monitor
- Illuminated Keyboard
- Speakers with Sub
- External Pump for Water cooling
- 4x 180mm fans on external rad
- My laptop dock with a laptop charging in it (always on, fiddly to unplug the dock lol)
So, that's a few items for that 530w. Interestingly, my 860i PSU apparently only spins up its fans when it hits a 400w+ load - I only rarely hear the fans spin up. My PSU is Platinum rated apparently and, using the monitoring software that came with it, it usually reports around 99% efficiency under these sort of loads, not a huge deal of course, but quite satisfying to see.
Anyway, just thought people would like another comparison to confirm that a dedicated gaming rig, even one running a pair of GPU's, doesn't need a 1200w PSU. My friend was actually running TWO PSU's in his old rig, one for the "system" and one just for the GPU's, for 2200w of PSU power all in. I did point out it was somewhat overkill, but he wasn't having it...until I replumbed it for him using just the "small" 1000w PSU and it was much more stable...
Cheers,
Scoob.