Contents of the box:
- Power supply unit
- Power cable (EUR)
- Modular cables:
- 1 cable with 1 20+4 pin connector (MB)
- 2 cables with 1 connector 12V(4+4 pins) each
- 1 cable with 2 Molex connectors and 1 FDD
- 1 cable with 1 Molex connector and 2 SATA
- 2 cables with 1 PCIe connector 6+2 pins each
- 2 cables with 3 SATA connectors each
- User's manual
Internal connectors
In this section we will see what internal connectors we can find in our DeepGaming
source and what they are for:
The 24-pin ATX main connector (20+4) - known as the P1 connector - is the general
power supply connector for the mainboard and the cards connected to it through the
expansion ports available on the mainboard.
On some older mainboards this connector only has 20 pins (this is the reason why
the connector can be separated into 2 blocks (one 20-pin and one 4-pin), so on
those boards with a 20-pin connector, we would leave the 4-pin block unconnected.
The processor power connector (12V 8 pins) - known as P2 - is an 8 pin connector
(4+4) that supplies 12V. For the same reason as the previous connector, it is divided
into 2 blocks of 4 pins (for compatibility with a wider range of motherboards).
Some (few) boards do not have this connector (neither 4 nor 8 pins). In such a case,
we will simply not connect this cable to the mainboard.
The SATA power connector (SATA-power) is a specific connector to power devices
that have a SATA connection interface. Currently widespread in storage drives, we
will find it in hard disk drives, SSDs or optical drives.
You will also find 4-pin Molex connectors - or Molex connector for peripherals -
used to power storage drives and some types of internal adapters. The advent of
SATA devices with their specific alimentaciń connector has relegated them to the
background, with much less presence today, although they are still present on some
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