crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0

crwdns2933803:07crwdne2933803:0

crwdns2933797:0Craig Lloydcrwdnd2933797:0crwdne2933797:0

crwdns2936043:0crwdne2936043:0 crwdns2933505:0crwdne2933505:0 Craig Lloyd

crwdns2933769:0crwdne2933769:0
crwdns2933771:0crwdne2933771:0
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crwdns2933807:0crwdne2933807:0

-[* black] Moving our teardown to a box inside the box, we lift the power supply away.
-[* black] This supply outputs up to 21.25 A at 12 V, for a total power output of 255 W. That's enough to run an RTX 3070! (But not the 3080).
- [* icon_note] That's also just a slightly higher output than the [guide|99609|Xbox One X's|new_window=true] 245 W supply.
-[* black] [Possible power supply disassembly pic]
+[* black] Moving along to a box within the box, we lift the power supply away from the main assembly.
+[* black] This PSU outputs up to 21.25 amps at 12 volts, for a total power output of 255 watts.
+ [* icon_note] That's just slightly higher than the [guide|99609|One X|new_window=true]'s 245-watt power supply, but significantly less than the optical PS5's 350-watt power output.
+ [* black] [Maybe include why this is so much less power than the PS5?]