ASUS created three new computer power supplies that meet ATX 3.1 standards. The company designed these units to give users better power tracking and clean electricity delivery. The lineup features the ROG THOR 1600W Titanium III as the premium model. Two other versions offer 1200W and 1000W power at Platinum efficiency ratings. Each unit contains a removable OLED screen that shows live power usage data.
The power supplies use Gallium Nitride technology instead of older components. These GaN parts work 30 percent better than standard designs. The smaller size lets ASUS add bigger cooling parts and better air flow inside each unit. A special feature called GPU First sends more stable power to graphics cards. This system delivers 45 percent better efficiency for video cards during heavy use.
Users can connect just the cables they need because all models have modular designs. The wires resist fire and bend easily during installation. Graphics card connectors use copper pins that remove heat better. Each power supply runs two ball bearing fans that last longer and make less noise. Sound tests show the 1600W model produces 15 to 20 decibels of noise.
The 1200W and 1000W versions run quieter at under 15 decibels average. All three units measure 150mm wide, 190mm deep and 86mm tall. They weigh between 2.36 and 2.8 kilograms each. The 1600W model costs around $800 USD. The 1200W version sells for about $500 USD and the 1000W model costs roughly $475 USD. ASUS plans to release all three models in June 2025.
The power supplies use Gallium Nitride technology instead of older components. These GaN parts work 30 percent better than standard designs. The smaller size lets ASUS add bigger cooling parts and better air flow inside each unit. A special feature called GPU First sends more stable power to graphics cards. This system delivers 45 percent better efficiency for video cards during heavy use.
Users can connect just the cables they need because all models have modular designs. The wires resist fire and bend easily during installation. Graphics card connectors use copper pins that remove heat better. Each power supply runs two ball bearing fans that last longer and make less noise. Sound tests show the 1600W model produces 15 to 20 decibels of noise.
The 1200W and 1000W versions run quieter at under 15 decibels average. All three units measure 150mm wide, 190mm deep and 86mm tall. They weigh between 2.36 and 2.8 kilograms each. The 1600W model costs around $800 USD. The 1200W version sells for about $500 USD and the 1000W model costs roughly $475 USD. ASUS plans to release all three models in June 2025.