- 20%

Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 650W 80+ Gold Full Modular SLI/Crossfile Ready ATX 3.0 Standard Power Supply; PCIe Gen.5 300W 12VHPWR Connector Included; PS-TPD-0650FNFAGU-L; 10 Year Warranty

Original price was: $99.99.Current price is: $79.99.

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Price: $99.99 - $79.99
(as of Dec 22, 2024 02:24:41 UTC – Details)


Toughpower PF3 Platinum series is fully compatible with Intel ATX 3.0 Specifications which supports up to 200% power excursion, reaches 60% low load efficiency and complies with required power supply timing standards. It also comes with comes with a 16pin connector to offer powerful and stable performance allowing the PSU to natively run next-generation GPUs. 80 Plus Platinum certification means the Toughpower PF3 converts power efficiently, resulting in lower power loss and heat buildup inside the power supply. The Toughower PF3 Plantinum Series is designed to be compact with size of 140mm (D) x 86mm (H) x 150mm (W) which provides ample space for cable management. Featuring a 120mm fluid dynamic bearing fan to create the perfect balance between silence and superior cooling. Furthermore, the Smart Zero Fan will adjust the fan speed and minimizes undesired noise. Built with 100% high quality Japanese 105°C/221°F electrolytic capacitors, providing great durability as well as offering the highest stability, while remaining reliable.Powerful single +12V rail can properly deliver the power you need for the best compatibility. The use of LLC and DC to DC circuit design provides very stable operation and enhanced voltage regulation.
80 Plus Gold Certified and Fully Compatible with Intel ATX 3.0 Standards
PCIe Gen 5.0 Ready
Made to Comply with the Latest Graphics Cards
High Amperage Single plus 12V Rail and High-Class Technologies
Fully Modular Low-Profile Flat Cables

Customers say

Customers are satisfied with the system power device’s functionality, quiet operation, and quality cables. They find it works well, is quiet, and comes with all the necessary cables and connectors. Many appreciate the easy installation, value for money, and modular design. However, some customers have mixed opinions on the power supply and build quality.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

12 reviews for Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 650W 80+ Gold Full Modular SLI/Crossfile Ready ATX 3.0 Standard Power Supply; PCIe Gen.5 300W 12VHPWR Connector Included; PS-TPD-0650FNFAGU-L; 10 Year Warranty

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  1. EmbeddedFlyer

    A high quality bargain
    I used to be a big Seasonic fan for power supplies but they’ve gone way up in price and I’ve had a few fail just after their 5 year warranty.Based on bench testing and tear down reviews these Toughpower supplies seem to be a less expensive and perhaps an even better option than Seasonic let alone all the sketchy gaming brands.I’ve had zero issues with several of them, they’re super quiet (and let you even turn the fan off entirely if you want), modular, and come with the all the right cables and connectors. They have a 5 year warranty and test out to be among the most efficient at light loads. They also have true power factor correction making them even cheaper to run and more UPS friendly.My oldest one is perhaps 3 years old but it’s been on 7×24 with zero issues so far. They use high quality Japanese capacitors where it matters and that’s usually the first thing to fail in power supplies so hopefully these will be long lived.Also, just to break a myth, few need a power supply over 650 watts even for most gaming systems. Yeah, if you have a RTX 4090 and an overlocked i9 14900K you might need an 850+ watt supply but few of us have such expensive hardware. And buying a bigger supply than you need just wastes energy at light loads. A 550 watt supply is much more efficient at 50 or 100 watts than a 850 watt supply at the same load. So bigger isn’t better if you don’t need the extra capacity. An RTX 4070 needs just 200 watts and most CPUs need even less. I have a small form factor gaming system with an RTX 4070 that’s happily running 100% stable on a small SFX 450 watt supply when most gamers claim you need a much bigger power supply.

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  2. Amazon Customer

    Nice, Quiet, and fits my Dell mini tower Optiplex 9020 perfectly
    Everything is very nice for my needs. The fan is so quiet, I couldn’t tell if my computer was on (I wish it was slightly louder). I hope this company is still going strong in 10 years to match their 10 year warranty. Should my powersupply decide to die at 11 years, I will buy one of these again! This power supply replaced my power supply in my Dell MiniTower Optiplex 9020 perfectly! (it seems to be the identical size. This is why I spent $10 more for this brand vs. another brand that seemed to be slightly larger so the special dell powersupply keeper/tab did not work. It is very compact.

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  3. Caliente Soul

    Power and style
    Easy install. Great packaging. Very attractive unit and cabling. Don’t notice any noise, so at least as quiet as my 650w unit. Will cover all my power needs now and in the future. About as exciting as a power supply can be…

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  4. Dean

    Expensive Mistake
    PROS:- Seemingly nice PSU- Thermaltake- semi-modular- quiet fan- well packed- nice nylon case to keep unused cables togetherCONS:- unreliable- expensive when it breaksI’ve used varying models from Thermaltake, Antec, Corsair, Seasonic, Enermax, even OEMs like Sparkle (SPI), and when one of those PSUs went bad, it was usually a loud sound, a loud pop, maybe a flash, some smoke, or even just one last good use, and then the computer wouldn’t turn on again.I bought two of these. One of these, didn’t afford me the same courtesy as other PSUs did when they die. After 10 months of occasional use with this power supply – maybe once or twice a month, the computer fails to turn on (it turns on then right back off again – not a dust issue, I clean the computer out every 3 to 6 months, no pets, non-smoker). I fiddle with connections related and unrelated to the PSU with no success. And just like that, the problem went away and the computer starts up again, however, 4 SSDs now won’t work (all connected to the same peripheral power cable from the PSU, and they don’t show up in the BIOS). I pull the drives out and tested them in another machine and also tested them on an external to USB device. All 4 drives (2x Samsungs (diff models), an Intel, and a Cruicial), all fried – literally (opened them up and a chip is melted with scorch marks on the inside of the SSD case). [I previously reported the SATA ports also were damaged, that was incorrect. A subsequent test showed the SATA ports were working fine]. Computer still boots, but it claimed I tried to overclock and reset the values (I didn’t overclock anything, I never do)I saw other reviews state it fried their hard drives, DVD, even one customer said that it actually caused their graphics cards to catch fire, another said he tested the peripheral output and saw it jumping to 16v. I’ll be honest, with the luck I’ve had with Thermaltake, I’d have read those reviews, shook my head, and probably said “eh, they did something to make that happen, these things are legit and solid!”. For thinking that, I apologize.I’ve seen Thermaltake’s response to some other customers – go to our ThermaltakeUSA.zendesk.com site for assistance which amounts to nothing more than warranty service which gets you “All warranty replacements will be replaced with the same model. Thermaltake will make repairs or send replacements only. We will not accept any requests to exchange, upgrade, or refund.” So, I’m supposed to get a repair/refurb of the same risky model I had in the first place that cost me$450 in SSDs, and add to that a $75 PSU, because I sure as heck don’t want to use that again, fixed or not? I’ll probably have to pay for shipping the bad one in too, so add that to the bill. But hey, at least I got a rebate on it, right?Avoid this PSU, I’m upset so my anger might be talking when I say avoid Thermaltake at all costs, but hopefully, maybe you read my situation and consider better choices before buying your next PSU – better than I did. If you have money to burn, or want to take a chance, then best of luck to you.[updated 5/29] emailed Thermaltake customer service – they responded within thirty minutes. They said their policy is strictly to replace a failed PSU with exactly the same model. I didn’t matter that I owned 7 PSUs from Thermaltake or that I offered to pay extra to get a model more reliable (I was clear I didn’t want it for free). So, as I said earlier, if you chance your equipment with this brand, best of luck to you. I’m done with Thermaltake and hope this review helps others avoid my mistake.[updated 6/5] customer service emailed me an RMA. I asked for a prepaid label. A couple more days went by and they finally responded and said “no”. Prepaid return labels are only if the equipment breaks in the first 30 days. Kind of nice since most retailers will also take it back in the first 30 days, so maybe that’s why they have the policy. In the end, I am deciding not to send it back. The unit cost me over $80, plus over $400 in damage, and then I get the shipping bill of $10-$20 to send it back to probably end up with same unit, probably lacking in quality, as a refurbished model. Less than 10 months use, I bought it brand new, and I get a refurb and an expensive bill. I buy, build, recommend, and consult in computers and IT. Some of you may be familiar with the Thermaltake brand, and have had good luck with them. So did I for the past 15 years or so. But, out of all the PSUs that have failed on me, none of them cost me extra money in additional damage. Sure, cheap ones do, but I don’t use cheap PSUs. Other retailers and Amazon list issues with this PSU that possibly shed light on quality or quality control, or both. When I recommend products to friends, co-workers, customers, I would ask them this when they ask for a cheap PSU – do you want a PSU that dies and costs you hundreds to thousands of dollars in damaged equipment, or worse, a fire hazard that threatens your home or business? The answer is almost always, what do you recommend. After this experience, I can say, it won’t be Thermaltake anymore and that’s too bad because at one time, they made great PSUs and had great quality.

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  5. Dave

    works as expected
    works as expected, great powersupply , nice features

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  6. chris r.

    White Build
    I upgraded GPU and wanted bigger PSU and wanted something to match with the white build. Also like this has the plug/cable for newer gen GPUs so no more adapters or multi cables.

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  7. Cyber Works Solutions

    First one doa
    I’ll give this product a 4 star rating only because I got a working replacement. The first one would power on my system but was not giving enough power to get it he fans in my case to work or GPU. Tested I with a PSU tester and it was failing the power good. Second one I got failed the power good out the box but I tri d it anyway and it worked tested it again and the power good test passed so not sure if it’s b cause it was never used or what but it’s been working king great since.

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  8. Ian Middleton

    Quiet, modular and doesn’t start and stop the fan at low idle like my last one which was annoying. Looks good.

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  9. Jesael Isaac Hernandez Gutierrez

    La fuente de poder es muy buena de 1050w la uso para un equipo de intel i7 14th y es full modular la compre por que viene con el puerto nuevo para tarjetas graficas serie 4000 de nvidia y realmente es muy completa se siente premium, tome la promocion y Salió muy bien por el precio ya que es muy poderosa la fuente. 10 de 10

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  10. Sr sherry

    Tenia grandes espectativas de esta fuente y pues me desepciono dice ser de 1050w se la puse a mi rtx 4080 y me genero coil whine justo al cambiar ese componente por que con mi otra fuente no sucedia eso, asi que tuve que volverla a reinstalar y es de 1000w nose si estaba defectuosa o no entrega los whtts que dice que es. Estoy triste genere devolución espero y salga todo bien y me regresen lo que falta pague. Pero estéticamente es muy bonita lastima que ami no me funciono

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  11. Raul Mis Salazar

    Producto de calidad que caracteriza la marca, llegó en excelente estado.

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  12. Amazon Customer

    A cap blew up inside within two weeks of purchase and installation in my pc. Luckily it did not destroy any other components and I have replaced it with a Corsair psu that’s been fine.

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    Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 650W 80+ Gold Full Modular SLI/Crossfile Ready ATX 3.0 Standard Power Supply; PCIe Gen.5 300W 12VHPWR Connector Included; PS-TPD-0650FNFAGU-L; 10 Year Warranty
    Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 650W 80+ Gold Full Modular SLI/Crossfile Ready ATX 3.0 Standard Power Supply; PCIe Gen.5 300W 12VHPWR Connector Included; PS-TPD-0650FNFAGU-L; 10 Year Warranty

    Original price was: $99.99.Current price is: $79.99.

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