Is sine wave protection worth it?

Ya93sin

New member
Hi all,

Within the last couple years I've had a Corsair AX850 and AX860i both fail on me, the first's 5V rail failing, the second deciding to crackle and then have a very tame explosion which nevertheless prevented any further boot ups;.

I've had my wiring checked out and it seems ok, though it is about 60 years old (UK) in my part of the house. I do use a surge protector (Belkin when using the AX850, APC when using the AX860i), though neither was able to prevent things going wrong.

I'm therefore wondering whether it would be worth investing in a sine wave protector or similar device, and whether that would 'clean' the power going to the PC.


I've a feeling that PSUs probably have some similar architecture in place, though clearly not enough to prevent PSUs dying. I don't think 2 expensive PSUs failing is just a case of bad luck (or is it?).

All advice is appreciated!
 
I use a UPS and find them great and sine wave is the best but the next is simulated sine wave and they are good too whilst saving a bit of dough and I lived in a 50 year old house and had nothing but issues till I put my rig on one and my stuff lasted much longer so yes can recommend
 
I use a UPS and find them great and sine wave is the best but the next is simulated sine wave and they are good too whilst saving a bit of dough and I lived in a 50 year old house and had nothing but issues till I put my rig on one and my stuff lasted much longer so yes can recommend

Thank you for the reply!

Which UPS & PSU do you have in your setup?
 
It is a Power Shield pure sine wave with my laptop but my rig when it gets back has a Corsair AX1200i and it protects everything lovely
 
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