I just installed the TP18W in my 7070 SFF and it's working fine. everything seems to match. What I can't seem to find is the part number for the 300w one.
Curious why theres two of the 260w and what the difference is...
Dell often has multiple DP/N for same spec of parts including psu. Sometimes the different DP/N are related to different manufacturer. For example Liteon and Chicony both make oem psu of same spec for Dell.
The Dell optiplex 5 series (7040-7070) and 6 series (7080-7090) use TFX form factor psu which are physically interchangeable between MT and SFF system.
5 series PSU dimensions: 8.5 x 6.5 x 22.5 cm
6 series PSU dimensions: 8.2 x 6.2 x 22 cm
In 5 series there is one 4 pin cpu connector whereas in 6 there are two. the psu for 6 series goes up to 500W whereas in 5 series it was up to 260w. This is because in 6 series Dell validated cpu is up to 125W of TDP whereas in 5 series it was up to 65W.
I run a 1650 LP already in my 7070 without upgrading the power supply. This is why there is only two LP GPU's available. It would be easier to just go with a tower and a full size card otherwise. I have a 7070 SFF i9-9900 32GB Ballistix RAM 1TB NVME P5 M.2 Storage, plus an external Seagate 4TB HDD with that GTX1650 low profile GPU. Original bought for £600, this baby clocks in at over £1000 of value, but it's priceless, because there is no point in selling it. No PC really handles 4K properly yet (Feb 2022), unless you are running on ickle monitors, and at 1080p my 7070 knocks it out of the park without breaking sweat. I don't even get noise, except from the occasional kick-up of the GPU fan, which soon cools itself and powers down again. I understand how going back to my 9020 days, everyone was worried about power supply, but that upgraded easily too. In all, I keep a 9020 SFF (minus it's 1050 LP) with 16GB DDR3 and a 500GB SSD and a 4790 CPU, and a 5050 SFF currently being upgraded to what will be a 7700 CPU. They are test beds for price between 2013 and 2019 and by switching out and upgrading, they catch up in a blink. The 9020 is max'd out, so once that starts to slow down, I would step up again. The only thing that ages it, is the older style chassis cabinet with the grey front, and the only real criticism I would make of DELL, is why they took out the DVD writer as standard because they are a real pain in the rear to get, and are extortionate to buy from DELL. I guess with digital replacing physical disk slowly but surely, they are assuming they are now obsolete in many ways. Sorry this is long, but I have done it on purpose. I have been tinkering with DELL SFF's for about 4 years now, and in that time I am tired of so many split opinions on forums. You never get the same answer twice, and so many people seem kept in the dark about little things of no significance. It took me ages at first to get my head around so many models, over so many years, like the CPU generations being upgradable by a generation each time. Once you have the general standard then the parameters of what an SFF are really easy to stay between, and although DELL obviously want to sell Alienware products, sometimes I wonder whether they've even realised what a phenomenon the SFF has become. It tucks away in the smallest of spaces and doesn't scream I'M GAAAAMING. The sweet spot sits between here and Alienware and would, I believe, sell twice the units at half the price. Which in my own set, drops at about the 5050, which is hilariously 50/50. DELL could sell an amazing product for £500 in the UK that would have enough clout that people would chase them. Even if they push the boat out and add a decent GPU/APU and a flashy chassis cabinet, you still would only be up to £700. That £1000 seems the glass ceiling, with anything beyond it an unnecessary overkill. Like buying a Bugatti W12, and thinking what that needs is another few cylinders. This has been a hobby for me, and overall I can't fault DELL for accidentally creating a champion in sleeper gaming machines. I just wish they could embrace it better, and can only think they imagine their units are all sat in offices somewhere. Hehe that's what we want the rest of the industry to think. Anyway, to those who read this. Don't just learn your specs, get a hold of the 'Optiplex' history, you'll feel confident when you know how DELL think through the eras. It's much the same as a smartphone. Every new generation adds and subtracts features and components. It's just a case of knowing which ones on each system. Like the 5050 being where M.2 storage begins. Happy gaming, ahem I mean, hope you get lots of work in your office done today Oh and just remember 1050/1650 LP they are fine, and anyone that tells you they are not (and there's too many) are idiots who obviously haven't used one themselves.
Did were you able to find the PSU? I am looking for a 260w PSU for Dell Optiplex 7070 SFF aswel. I am not able to find TP18W model.. but I do see 3YNRJ sold online. Is 3YNRJ would fit Optiplex 7070 SFF?
JohnSnow
17 Posts
0
August 22nd, 2021 15:00
I just installed the TP18W in my 7070 SFF and it's working fine. everything seems to match. What I can't seem to find is the part number for the 300w one.
Curious why theres two of the 260w and what the difference is...
redxps630
9 Legend
•
15.4K Posts
1
August 22nd, 2021 20:00
Dell often has multiple DP/N for same spec of parts including psu. Sometimes the different DP/N are related to different manufacturer. For example Liteon and Chicony both make oem psu of same spec for Dell.
The Dell optiplex 5 series (7040-7070) and 6 series (7080-7090) use TFX form factor psu which are physically interchangeable between MT and SFF system.
5 series PSU dimensions: 8.5 x 6.5 x 22.5 cm
6 series PSU dimensions: 8.2 x 6.2 x 22 cm
In 5 series there is one 4 pin cpu connector whereas in 6 there are two. the psu for 6 series goes up to 500W whereas in 5 series it was up to 260w. This is because in 6 series Dell validated cpu is up to 125W of TDP whereas in 5 series it was up to 65W.
SteveMack
6 Posts
0
January 29th, 2022 19:00
I run a 1650 LP already in my 7070 without upgrading the power supply. This is why there is only two LP GPU's available. It would be easier to just go with a tower and a full size card otherwise. I have a 7070 SFF i9-9900 32GB Ballistix RAM 1TB NVME P5 M.2 Storage, plus an external Seagate 4TB HDD with that GTX1650 low profile GPU. Original bought for £600, this baby clocks in at over £1000 of value, but it's priceless, because there is no point in selling it. No PC really handles 4K properly yet (Feb 2022), unless you are running on ickle monitors, and at 1080p my 7070 knocks it out of the park without breaking sweat. I don't even get noise, except from the occasional kick-up of the GPU fan, which soon cools itself and powers down again. I understand how going back to my 9020 days, everyone was worried about power supply, but that upgraded easily too. In all, I keep a 9020 SFF (minus it's 1050 LP) with 16GB DDR3 and a 500GB SSD and a 4790 CPU, and a 5050 SFF currently being upgraded to what will be a 7700 CPU. They are test beds for price between 2013 and 2019 and by switching out and upgrading, they catch up in a blink. The 9020 is max'd out, so once that starts to slow down, I would step up again. The only thing that ages it, is the older style chassis cabinet with the grey front, and the only real criticism I would make of DELL, is why they took out the DVD writer as standard because they are a real pain in the rear to get, and are extortionate to buy from DELL. I guess with digital replacing physical disk slowly but surely, they are assuming they are now obsolete in many ways. Sorry this is long, but I have done it on purpose. I have been tinkering with DELL SFF's for about 4 years now, and in that time I am tired of so many split opinions on forums. You never get the same answer twice, and so many people seem kept in the dark about little things of no significance. It took me ages at first to get my head around so many models, over so many years, like the CPU generations being upgradable by a generation each time. Once you have the general standard then the parameters of what an SFF are really easy to stay between, and although DELL obviously want to sell Alienware products, sometimes I wonder whether they've even realised what a phenomenon the SFF has become. It tucks away in the smallest of spaces and doesn't scream I'M GAAAAMING. The sweet spot sits between here and Alienware and would, I believe, sell twice the units at half the price. Which in my own set, drops at about the 5050, which is hilariously 50/50. DELL could sell an amazing product for £500 in the UK that would have enough clout that people would chase them. Even if they push the boat out and add a decent GPU/APU and a flashy chassis cabinet, you still would only be up to £700. That £1000 seems the glass ceiling, with anything beyond it an unnecessary overkill. Like buying a Bugatti W12, and thinking what that needs is another few cylinders. This has been a hobby for me, and overall I can't fault DELL for accidentally creating a champion in sleeper gaming machines. I just wish they could embrace it better, and can only think they imagine their units are all sat in offices somewhere. Hehe that's what we want the rest of the industry to think. Anyway, to those who read this. Don't just learn your specs, get a hold of the 'Optiplex' history, you'll feel confident when you know how DELL think through the eras. It's much the same as a smartphone. Every new generation adds and subtracts features and components. It's just a case of knowing which ones on each system. Like the 5050 being where M.2 storage begins. Happy gaming, ahem I mean, hope you get lots of work in your office done today Oh and just remember 1050/1650 LP they are fine, and anyone that tells you they are not (and there's too many) are idiots who obviously haven't used one themselves.
nafr1
2 Posts
0
March 15th, 2022 08:00
Hello,
Did were you able to find the PSU? I am looking for a 260w PSU for Dell Optiplex 7070 SFF aswel. I am not able to find TP18W model.. but I do see 3YNRJ sold online. Is 3YNRJ would fit Optiplex 7070 SFF?
Thanks