Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W Gold PSU
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Set Alert for Product: Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W, True 300W 12VHPWR Connectors on PSU & NVIDIA RTX 40 Series, ATX 3.0/PCI-E 5.0, 80+ Gold, SLI/Crossfire Ready Power Supply, PS-TPD-0750FNFAGU-L, 10 Year Warranty - $84.99
Last Amazon price update was: January 9, 2025 23:37
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Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W Gold PSU
Original price was: $109.99.$84.99Current price is: $84.99.
Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W Gold PSU Price comparison
Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W Gold PSU Price History
Price History for Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W, True 300W 12VHPWR Connectors on PSU & NVIDIA RTX 40 Series,...
Statistics
Current Price | $84.99 | January 9, 2025 |
Highest Price | $85.99 | August 25, 2024 |
Lowest Price | $79.99 | July 19, 2024 |
Since July 19, 2024
Last price changes
$84.99 | October 8, 2024 |
$85.99 | August 25, 2024 |
$79.99 | July 19, 2024 |
Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W Gold PSU Description
- 80 Plus Gold Certified and Fully Compatible with Intel ATX 3.0 Standards
- PCIe Gen 5.0 Ready
- Made to Comply with the Latest Graphics Cards
- High Amperage Single plus 12V Rail and High-Class Technologies
- Fully Modular Low-Profile Flat Cables
Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W Gold PSU Specification
Specification: Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W Gold PSU
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Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W Gold PSU Reviews (13)
13 reviews for Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 750W Gold PSU
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Dean –
PROS:
– Seemingly nice PSU
– Thermaltake
– semi-modular
– quiet fan
– well packed
– nice nylon case to keep unused cables together
CONS:
– unreliable
– expensive when it breaks
I’ve used varying models from Thermaltake, Antec, Corsair, Seasonic, Enermax, even OEMs like Sparkle (SPI), and when one of those PSUs went bad, it was usually a loud sound, a loud pop, maybe a flash, some smoke, or even just one last good use, and then the computer wouldn’t turn on again.
I bought two of these. One of these, didn’t afford me the same courtesy as other PSUs did when they die. After 10 months of occasional use with this power supply – maybe once or twice a month, the computer fails to turn on (it turns on then right back off again – not a dust issue, I clean the computer out every 3 to 6 months, no pets, non-smoker). I fiddle with connections related and unrelated to the PSU with no success. And just like that, the problem went away and the computer starts up again, however, 4 SSDs now won’t work (all connected to the same peripheral power cable from the PSU, and they don’t show up in the BIOS). I pull the drives out and tested them in another machine and also tested them on an external to USB device. All 4 drives (2x Samsungs (diff models), an Intel, and a Cruicial), all fried – literally (opened them up and a chip is melted with scorch marks on the inside of the SSD case). [I previously reported the SATA ports also were damaged, that was incorrect. A subsequent test showed the SATA ports were working fine]. Computer still boots, but it claimed I tried to overclock and reset the values (I didn’t overclock anything, I never do)
I saw other reviews state it fried their hard drives, DVD, even one customer said that it actually caused their graphics cards to catch fire, another said he tested the peripheral output and saw it jumping to 16v. I’ll be honest, with the luck I’ve had with Thermaltake, I’d have read those reviews, shook my head, and probably said “eh, they did something to make that happen, these things are legit and solid!”. For thinking that, I apologize.
I’ve seen Thermaltake’s response to some other customers – go to our ThermaltakeUSA.zendesk.com site for assistance which amounts to nothing more than warranty service which gets you “All warranty replacements will be replaced with the same model. Thermaltake will make repairs or send replacements only. We will not accept any requests to exchange, upgrade, or refund.” So, I’m supposed to get a repair/refurb of the same risky model I had in the first place that cost me$450 in SSDs, and add to that a $75 PSU, because I sure as heck don’t want to use that again, fixed or not? I’ll probably have to pay for shipping the bad one in too, so add that to the bill. But hey, at least I got a rebate on it, right?
Avoid this PSU, I’m upset so my anger might be talking when I say avoid Thermaltake at all costs, but hopefully, maybe you read my situation and consider better choices before buying your next PSU – better than I did. If you have money to burn, or want to take a chance, then best of luck to you.
[updated 5/29] emailed Thermaltake customer service – they responded within thirty minutes. They said their policy is strictly to replace a failed PSU with exactly the same model. I didn’t matter that I owned 7 PSUs from Thermaltake or that I offered to pay extra to get a model more reliable (I was clear I didn’t want it for free). So, as I said earlier, if you chance your equipment with this brand, best of luck to you. I’m done with Thermaltake and hope this review helps others avoid my mistake.
[updated 6/5] customer service emailed me an RMA. I asked for a prepaid label. A couple more days went by and they finally responded and said “no”. Prepaid return labels are only if the equipment breaks in the first 30 days. Kind of nice since most retailers will also take it back in the first 30 days, so maybe that’s why they have the policy. In the end, I am deciding not to send it back. The unit cost me over $80, plus over $400 in damage, and then I get the shipping bill of $10-$20 to send it back to probably end up with same unit, probably lacking in quality, as a refurbished model. Less than 10 months use, I bought it brand new, and I get a refurb and an expensive bill. I buy, build, recommend, and consult in computers and IT. Some of you may be familiar with the Thermaltake brand, and have had good luck with them. So did I for the past 15 years or so. But, out of all the PSUs that have failed on me, none of them cost me extra money in additional damage. Sure, cheap ones do, but I don’t use cheap PSUs. Other retailers and Amazon list issues with this PSU that possibly shed light on quality or quality control, or both. When I recommend products to friends, co-workers, customers, I would ask them this when they ask for a cheap PSU – do you want a PSU that dies and costs you hundreds to thousands of dollars in damaged equipment, or worse, a fire hazard that threatens your home or business? The answer is almost always, what do you recommend. After this experience, I can say, it won’t be Thermaltake anymore and that’s too bad because at one time, they made great PSUs and had great quality.
Sandvich –
Its quiet, has every connector you would ever need, and all at a great price. Its easy to install and works very well in powering my system. This would be my go to psu for any mid range system
Shawn –
Solid power supply at a great price point. Comes with everything you need and is easily more than enough power for a mid to upper range build.
Soulcrawler –
Bought it to replace a 1000 w thermal take that died after more than 8 years of hard work, there was a huge electric surge at home an it died but protected the rest of the components.
I have installed this new unit it on my PC almost a month ago and so far I had no issues, is really quiet and works great, love thermal take products.
Raul Mis Salazar –
No tengo problema con ella funciona a la perfecciรณn. Lo รบnico que no me acaba de gustar es que los cables son dobles, pero eso es mas a titulo personal.
Sr sherry –
Tenia grandes espectativas de esta fuente y pues me desepciono dice ser de 1050w se la puse a mi rtx 4080 y me genero coil whine justo al cambiar ese componente por que con mi otra fuente no sucedia eso, asi que tuve que volverla a reinstalar y es de 1000w nose si estaba defectuosa o no entrega los whtts que dice que es. Estoy triste genere devoluciรณn espero y salga todo bien y me regresen lo que falta pague. Pero estรฉticamente es muy bonita lastima que ami no me funciono
Sr sherry –
fonction tres bien satisfait
mario –
Producto de calidad que caracteriza la marca, llegรณ en excelente estado.
Doug –
Took a omen 30L and modified it. Put this in. its powering a 3090, a750, 1070 and ryzen 7 lights fans and more. Very impressed Highly recommend. Some of the Power cords are difficult finding but youd have that with most brands.
Salvador Velasco –
Good product at a fair price with fast delivery.
Scotty –
I have built my own computers since the late 80s/early 90s. I build them to last. Last computer was a 3rd generation intel core i7 and used it till just a few months ago when I decided it was time to build a new one. Current build is a 14th generation core i7, so it will probably outlive me (yes I am old). A lot has changed over the years with building your own computers. If you are older all black cases and parts are almost impossible to see to build even with plenty of light., but what used to take me an hour took me 3 days. Computer runs 24/7 and I have to look inside the glass case to see if the fans are spinning to know that it is on as I still have good hearing and can not hear a thing. Highly recommended.
Jagsfan84 –
What can I say, its a Thermaltake PSU. It works, nicely packaged, comes with all of the cables you need and a nice storage bag for all of the extra unused cables. The included 12VHPWR cable is great because you don’t have to use the ugly pig tail adapter that is included with the card(MSI 4070ti). Fits perfectly in my Musetek K2 case.
Bibek Manandhar –
Nice and powerful. very easy to install and the power delivery is great.