Conclusion

The AX1500i is definitely a special kind of product. It aims not for a particular group of users, but for the cream of hardcore overclockers, enthusiasts, gamers, and professionals. In other words, it targets users that both have crazy power requirements and, at the same time, require excellent overall performance. Of course, if you do not possess a very power-hungry system with multiple high end GPUs and CPUs, the massive output of the AX1500i would not make any sense to begin with.

Both externally and internally, the AX1500i has been very carefully designed and built. It is aesthetically appealing without being extravagant and the fully modular design is appreciable on a unit with so many cables. Only the size of the chassis could become a problem in smaller cases but we can hardly imagine someone purchasing a $450 PSU with the purpose of installing it inside a run of the mill case. Inside the AX1500i, Corsair uses fine quality components and has one of the most detailed assembly jobs ever performed. They really cut no corners when designing and building this power supply.

When it comes to performance, the Corsair AX1500i is almost frightening. Starting with the efficiency, as the 80 Plus Titanium certification is one of the primary selling points of this product, the AX1500i has a higher average efficiency than the top efficiency many 80 Plus Platinum units can achieve. It also has exceptionally high efficiency at low loads, which is very useful for a unit of this output, as the power requirements of even the most power hungry systems while idling are just a few percent of this unit's capacity. The quality of the output is also breathtaking, with very low voltage ripple even under massive loads and unparalleled regulation. Furthermore, due to the high efficiency, the AX1500i emits only very low volumes of heat, allowing it to operate virtually fanless across a large portion of its capacity range. The Corsair AX1500i undoubtedly delivers the best all-around performance that we have seen to this date.

With the release of the AX1500i, to our eyes, Corsair has simply tried to create the very best power supply possible, regardless of the cost and market potential. They did succeed on breaking almost every performance record we can come up with for a consumer-grade PSU... but that includes the record for being the most expensive unit a consumer can currently buy.

With a retail price of $450, this is definitely not a product aiming for the masses. Using any 1500W PSU to power even a high-end gaming PC, let alone a basic Home/Office PC, would be the very definition of the word "overkill". Corsair's AX1500i is a PSU meant for the most advanced gaming computers and workstations, and only for those users that are willing to spend a few hundred extra bucks in order to get the very best there is.

It's doubtful most of us will ever use such a product, but just as the 80 Plus program brought higher efficiency power supplies to the masses, products like the AX1500i will inevitably have a "trickle down" effect. Seven years ago the cost of a good 80 Plus Bronze 1000W PSU ranged from around $250 to over $300. Such power supplies were mostly overkill even then, but today you can find them for less than half the price, and higher efficiency 80 Plus Gold PSUs aren't much more. It may take some time to get there, but undoubtedly we will see much of the technology in the AX1500i makes it's way into more reasonable products. You have to start somewhere, and R&D often starts at the top.

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  • Homeles - Thursday, September 11, 2014 - link

    The internals of that PSU are simply gorgeous. Can't wait to get my EE degree and help design something like that.
  • quick brown fox - Thursday, September 11, 2014 - link

    As somebody who has previously worked for a power supply company (not these ATX form factors though), designing very high efficiency PSUs like these is hard as HELL. You're not going to enjoy designing and testing these when all you're missing is that +1% efficiency for certification purposes.
  • Samus - Thursday, September 11, 2014 - link

    It's always useful that this thing doubles as a jump starter for my car...
  • rickon66 - Thursday, September 11, 2014 - link

    Electric welding anyone?
  • DanNeely - Thursday, September 11, 2014 - link

    Even small benchtop welders need double the power of something like this. Bigger free standing models start at needing a 50A-220V circuit for input (and presumably go up from there).
  • davidgirgis - Thursday, September 11, 2014 - link

    Dream Computer:
    Caselabs Magnum TX10-D
    2x Corsair AX1500i
    Asus X99-E WS
    Intel Core i7-5960X
    64 GB Corsair Dominator Platinum 2800 MHz
    4x EVGA GeForce GTX Titan Black Hydro Copper
    Creative Sound Blaster ZxR
    512 GB Plextor M6e M.2
    8x 1TB Samsung 850 Pro in RAID 0
    Digistor 5.25" Blu-ray Burner Slot-Load

    Accessories:
    3x 27" Asus ROG Swift
    nVidia 3D Vision 2
    Corsair Vengeance K70 RGB
    Mad Catz R.A.T. Tournament Edition
    Razer Invicta
    Razer Oberweaver
    Turtle Beach Ear Force XP Seven
    Logitech Z906
    Microsoft Xbox One Wireless Controller
    Thrustmaster T500 RS GT5 Wheel
    Thrustmaster TH8 RS Shifter
    Thrustmaster HOTAS Warthog

    Water Cooling:
    EK-Supremacy EVO Elite Edition
    4x EK-CoolStream RAD XTX 480
    2x EK-RES X3 400
    2x Swiftech MCP655
    2x Bitspower pump mod kit
    Bitspower XStation
    xx Bitspower Black Sparkle Fittings
    2x Bitspower tap drainage
    4x Bitspower mid-loop temperature sensors
    2x Bitspower Flow-Meter
    xx Blacknoise Noiseblocker NB-BlackSilent Pro fans
    Aquacomputer Aquaero 6 XT Fan Controller
    Rigid Acrylic Tubing
    Coolant
    Some Lights
  • Dr.Neale - Thursday, September 11, 2014 - link

    AeroCool Dead Silence fans (available in black, or with red, white, or blue LEDs, in 120mm or 140mm) would be better.
  • Dr.Neale - Thursday, September 11, 2014 - link

    P.S. They are available at www.FrozenCPU.com FYI.
  • fluxtatic - Friday, September 12, 2014 - link

    Enjoy losing 8TB of data when one of your SSDs flakes out.
  • Phillip Wager - Friday, September 12, 2014 - link

    wow this is really tempting to pick up just to be compleatly fanless at around 600 watts or less! that justification enough to pick up a $350 dollar power supply thats 3x the power than i'll ever need right? .........right??

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