How many HDD's off 1 Molex? PICOPSU

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According to the manual for that PSU, it has a 6A max (continuous) draw on the 5V and a 8A max (continuous) on the 12V.

According to WD the 4TB Green drives (currently) pull about 1.75A max (peak). So four of them could be pulling ~7A from the 12V rail (say, during spin-up).

So you should be within the limits, as long as all other devices (including the Motherboard, RAM, CPU, etc.) pull a total of <1A of 12V.

I personally wouldn't do it, as it's way to close for my comfort, and slightly larger PSUs that can handle a bigger load are available.

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Andrew Konken
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I'm Andrew Recent Sheridan college graduate. Software developer, primarily Asp.net, c#, jQuery, Javascript, CSS. Looking to get some help, and hopefully learn.

Updated on September 18, 2022

Comments

  • Andrew Konken
    Andrew Konken over 1 year

    First question here. I saw some posts about powering 2 HDD's from one molex, but I want to power 3-4 drives. I want to use a single molex and use splitters for the rest of the drives.

    Below is an image of the power supply I want to use for a 4 Bay NAS. 150W is more than enough power for the setup I want to do, and the size is appealing considering limited space inside the enclosure.

    Power Supply Image

    It has 1 SATA connector for a drive, but I will need to get power to the other 3 drives, possibly 1 more for the OS if possible.

    I'm wondering if I use a molex to 4 SATA cable, if I will have enough power.

    I'm just hoping I'm not going to go over the amount of current available on startup, since I know it's going to be one of the most uses of power when all of the disks start up.

    Sorry if I did a duplicate question.

    Edit: Question already about what power supply limitations are.... So I'll link to the specs of the power supply:

    PICOPSU-150-XT

    Also looking at 4TB hard drives. Probably WD Green or Blue drives. Hard drives is flexible if the option is available.

    • fixer1234
      fixer1234 almost 9 years
      This might depend on your PSU and the power limits per output. What do the specs (typically on a sticker on the PSU), say and how does that compare to the total device current you want to supply from one output?
    • armani
      armani almost 9 years
      Different hard drives have different power draws and power dissipations. What model hard drives are you looking at for this?
    • Andrew Konken
      Andrew Konken almost 9 years
      Thanks for the reply, and that's a good question. I editted the original post to include the Power Supply information instead of the link to the molex to 4 Sata connector.
    • armani
      armani almost 9 years
      Gotta run, no time for maths, but here's some hints... this question (superuser.com/questions/565653/…) says a 3TB WD Green drive uses about 21 Watts, and (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molex_connector) shows the output of a power supply.
    • Jamie Hanrahan
      Jamie Hanrahan almost 9 years
      The WD Green spec sheet I linked in my answer shows the WD Greens at far less than 21 watts, except of course at spin-up.
  • Andrew Konken
    Andrew Konken almost 9 years
    Yeah after looking at the manual that looks to be not quite enough power. To order one of these with the power brick it was starting to get a bit expensive in comparison to other options.
  • Arthur Kay
    Arthur Kay almost 9 years
    Yeah there's no way. CPU at full load will probably be 3-5A on 12. Then again I have an OCed hex core Xeon (from when you could). ED: yeah 5A*12 is only 60W and I idle in the 200s with four HDDs and an old midrange GPU.