The power supply is the part that quietly protects everything it feeds. This guide keeps the focus on school coding club projects and what is genuinely worth paying for at Evetech.
Quick Answer
For school coding club projects, the PSU matters more than buyers think, since it is the part that protects everything else, so size it with headroom and buy a real 80 PLUS rating. A quality 650W to 850W unit at R1,200 to R2,800 covers most single-GPU builds. Skimping here risks the whole system, so this is not the place to save R300.
Clean, stable power for long sessions
Stable voltage matters for quiet late-night gaming and long compute jobs. A surge protector or a basic line conditioner guards against the brief spikes that can corrupt a job or stress the PSU. Modular cabling also improves airflow, which keeps the whole system cooler and quieter.
Where saving money costs more
A R600 generic PSU is the classic false economy: it may run, but its protection circuits and capacitors are weak. When it fails it can damage far pricier parts. The R1,200 to R2,800 tier from a known maker, with a multi-year warranty, is cheap insurance for the rest of the build.
Sizing with headroom, not to the limit
For school coding club projects, total your components' draw and add roughly 30% headroom so the PSU runs efficiently and quietly in its mid-range. A 650W unit suits most mid GPUs; 750W to 850W covers higher-end cards with transient spikes. Running a PSU at 95% load all night shortens its life and spins the fan loud.
FAQ
How many watts do I need?
For school coding club projects, total your parts and add about 30% headroom. Most mid builds are happy on 650W; higher-end single-GPU systems want 750W to 850W to handle transient spikes.
Is the 80 PLUS rating worth it?
Yes as a baseline: Bronze is the floor, Gold runs cooler and more efficiently. But build quality and proper protection circuits matter even more than the badge.
Can a cheap PSU damage my PC?
It can. A failing low-quality unit can send a spike through the system and damage the motherboard or GPU. A reputable PSU with real protection is cheap insurance for far pricier parts.
PSU with about 30% headroom over your total draw and buy a known 80 PLUS unit with a multi-year warranty - it runs quieter and protects every other part in the build.