
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) Internal Design Cooling is handled by a Globe S1352512HH 135mm fan with a dual ball bearing engine. Dual ball bearings represent the most durable bearing technology in widespread commercial use, with tolerance for high temperatures and extended operating hours that exceeds sleeve and fluid dynamic alternatives. The trade-off is acoustic behavior at high rotational speeds – dual ball bearings produce a more mechanical sound when pushed. The rated maximum of 1900 RPM is conservative for a high-output unit, and the fan should not approach that figure under typical loads.
The OEM is Shenzhen Ruishengyuan Technology, or RSY. The company has been operating since 2014, making it a relatively recent entrant compared to established names like CWT or Seasonic. That said, RSY's platform work has increasingly appeared inside mid-to-top-tier products from multiple recognized brands, and the quality of their assembly is evident on inspection. The Platimax II platform is well-organized, with consistent workmanship throughout.
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) Input filtering comprises four Y capacitors, two X capacitors, and two filtering inductors. Two rectifying bridges are mounted on a two-piece heatsink immediately after the filtration stage. The APFC stage uses three Wayon WML28N60C4 MOSFETs alongside a pair of diodes. A large simple inductor and two Rubycon 470 µF capacitors complete the APFC circuitry.
The primary inversion stage employs four Convert CS25N50FF MOSFETs in a full-bridge topology, mounted on two small silver heatsinks positioned immediately ahead of the main transformer. Eight Hauyi HYG020N04 MOSFETs on the secondary side generate the 12V rail through synchronous rectification, cooled by simple silver heatsinks right after the secondary face of the transformer, while a dedicated vertical daughterboard handles DC-to-DC conversion for the 3.3V and 5V rails.
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) Secondary-side filtering relies on capacitors from Rubycon and Nippon Chemi-Con, with some Unicon electrolytics in the mix. All three manufacturers carry strong reputations. The selection aligns with Enermax's stated use of Japanese capacitors throughout, a marketing claim that, unusually, holds up under scrutiny.
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) Cold Test Results Cold Test Results (25°C Ambient) For the testing of PSUs, we are using high precision electronic loads with a maximum power draw of 2700 Watts, a Rigol DS5042M 40 MHz oscilloscope, an Extech 380803 power analyzer, two high precision UNI-T UT-325 digital thermometers, an Extech HD600 SPL meter, a self-designed hotbox and various other bits and parts.
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) At 115 VAC, the Platimax II 1200DF achieves 91.3% average efficiency across the nominal load range. At 230 VAC, that figure rises to 93.2%. Both results satisfy the 80Plus Platinum standard and Cybenetics Platinum requirements independent of input voltage, which is not a trivial achievement. Many units lose their Platinum footing when the input changes. Efficiency peaks around the 30 to 40 percent load mark and remains stable across the full nominal range with no significant dips.
The fan remains stationary until load crosses approximately 550W, roughly 45 percent of the rated capacity. Once the fan engages, speed increases with the load but does not reach the 1900 RPM ceiling even at full load. Internal temperatures remain well-controlled throughout.
Elevated ambient testing introduces measurable efficiency degradation, perhaps even above than expected for a unit with such high-quality components. Average efficiency at 115 VAC drops to 89.5%, and at 230 VAC it falls to 91.3%. At maximum load under these conditions, there are visible signs of thermal stress, with the efficiency taking a significant dip. As the PSU is rated at 40°C, managing the full output at this temperature is already taking its toll.
(Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) (Image credit: Tom's Hardware) The fan activates earlier under heat, engaging when load exceeds 400W rather than the 550W cold threshold. Speed increases more aggressively with rising load but does so linearly, reaching maximum speed only near 100% output. The acoustic result at full load in a hot environment is very much noticeable. The dual ball bearing fan produces a mechanical whir that becomes irritating. The temperatures are very well within safe limits.
Voltage regulation is strong across all rails. The 12V rail holds to within 0.4% across the entire load range, the 5V rail to 0.5%, and the 3.3V rail to 0.9%. These are competitive figures by current standards and well within what is expected from a top-tier product. Ripple suppression is equally solid. The 12V rail peaks at 22 mV, the 5V rail at 18 mV, and the 3.3V rail at 20 mV. The ATX specification ceiling is 120 mV on the 12V rail and 50 mV on the minor rails. The Platimax II operates comfortably inside these limits at all times, delivering consistently clean power regardless of load.
During our routine evaluation, we examine the fundamental protection features of all power supply units we review, including Over Current Protection (OCP), Over Voltage Protection (OVP), Over Power Protection (OPP), and Short Circuit Protection (SCP). Protection circuit behavior merits discussion. The 3.3V and 5V rails trigger OCP at 120% and 122% of rated current respectively, which is good but also comparatively low against other platforms. On the other hand, the 12V rail OCP activates at 146%, providing a very generous headroom – for a unit rated at 40°C and already pushing it being rated at 1200 watts, that seems like a very slack setting. Furthermore, OPP under hot conditions triggers at 144% of rated output, which feels unsafe for a unit already struggling at 100% capacity.
The Platimax II 1200DF is a well-engineered product from an OEM that, while not a popular name, has demonstrated the capability to build competitive platforms. RSY's construction quality is evident throughout, and the component choices, such as all-Japanese capacitors, reinforce the unit's premium positioning in a way that is difficult to fault. The active components also are of good quality, the topologies are tried-and-true, and the overall assembly reflects a manufacturer that knows what they are doing.
The efficiency figures are great and consistent. The unit clears Platinum certifications across both input voltages under normal conditions, and the electrical output quality is strong throughout the load range. Voltage regulation and ripple suppression are both class-competitive. One exception deserves mention: the 12V OCP threshold at 146% and OPP at 144% under hot conditions are slack settings for a unit that already shows signs of thermal stress at 100% load. A unit rated to its limits at 40°C should not be offering that much headroom before protection kicks in. It is not a dealbreaker, but it is a design choice that invites scrutiny.
The 40 °C maximum ambient rating itself is worth flagging. Premium units in this class are commonly rated to 50 °C, and the gap shows in hot testing, where efficiency degradation is steeper than the component quality alone would suggest. With the limited number of connectors, the Platimax II 1200DF feels more of a driven 900-1000W unit rather than a true 1200 watt model.
The 13-year warranty remains the most compelling single argument for this unit. It is an unusual commitment, and even the great quality of the hardware does not really justify the confidence behind it. The cable configuration, however, continues to undermine the overall case. One 12V-2×6 connector and three 6+2 pin PCI Express connectors are simply not enough for a 1200W product. The capacity seems to be there, but the wiring to use it is not.
At $230, the Platimax II 1200DF is a credible choice for a builder prioritizing reliability, clean power, and long-term peace of mind over maximum connectivity. It competes well on electrical performance and warranty terms. Those who need more than one high-powered graphics card connector, or who expect a 50 °C rating at this price, will need to look elsewhere. For everyone else, this is a serious unit from a manufacturer that clearly believes in what it has built.
Dr. E. Fylladitakis has been passionate about PCs since the 8088 era, beginning his PC gaming journey with classics like Metal Mutant and Battle Chess. Not long after, he built his first PC, a 486, and has been an enthusiast ever since. In the early 2000\u2019s, he delved deeply into overclocking Duron and Pentium 4 processors, liquid cooling, and phase-change cooling technologies. While he has an extensive and broad engineering education, Dr. Fylladitakis specializes in electrical and energy engineering, with numerous articles published in scientific journals, some contributing to novel cooling technologies and power electronics. He has been a hardware reviewer at AnandTech for nearly a decade. Outside of his professional pursuits, he enjoys immersing himself in a good philosophy book and unwinding through PC games. ","collapsible":{"enabled":true,"maxHeight":250,"readMoreText":"Read more","readLessText":"Read less"}}), "https://slice.vanilla.futurecdn.net/13-4-20/js/authorBio.js"); } else { console.error('%c FTE ','background: #9306F9; color: #ffffff','no lazy slice hydration function available'); } E. Fylladitakis Contributing Editor Dr. E. Fylladitakis has been passionate about PCs since the 8088 era, beginning his PC gaming journey with classics like Metal Mutant and Battle Chess. Not long after, he built his first PC, a 486, and has been an enthusiast ever since. In the early 2000’s, he delved deeply into overclocking Duron and Pentium 4 processors, liquid cooling, and phase-change cooling technologies. While he has an extensive and broad engineering education, Dr. Fylladitakis specializes in electrical and energy engineering, with numerous articles published in scientific journals, some contributing to novel cooling technologies and power electronics. He has been a hardware reviewer at AnandTech for nearly a decade. Outside of his professional pursuits, he enjoys immersing himself in a good philosophy book and unwinding through PC games.
Key considerations
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Reference reading
- https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/power-supplies/SPONSORED_LINK_URL
- https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/power-supplies/enermax-platimax-ii-1200df-power-supply-review#main
- https://www.tomshardware.com
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Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.