Reply 80 of 201, by MagefromAntares
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While I have only a small amount of experience with Micro ATX power supplies as I generally put even Micro ATX motherboards into cases that can fit a regular sized ATX PSU, now that two others mentioned the brand so their Micro ATX PSUs are also seem to be built according to the same standard as their regular sized ones, I can also say that I never had an issue with a Corsair PSU, they are very dependable in my experience.
And as mentioned by NeoG_ a second hand PSU is also an option, the only thing with if you buy second hand is that always check the voltages of the PSU before connecting to the system with a multimeter and a dummy load (A dummy load is necessary because switching mode PSUs are either output not exactly the same voltages or won't start if there are no load, if you don't have a dummy load, you can use a not-working but still drawing power piece of HW like a faulty motherboard and a bad HDD to be the dummy load), and if the history of the PSU is not known then assume that the PSU went though heavy 24 hours per day usage and some components are aged so subtract 10% from the labelled wattage to be on the safe side.
"A process cannot be understood by stopping it. Understanding must move with the flow of the process, must join it and flow with it." - Dune