In the world of PC enthusiasts, Lian Li is a name synonymous with top-quality aluminum cases. The company introduced their first PC cases back in the 90’s, when PCs still were a rare find in living rooms. Their minimalistic designs and all-aluminum constructs were a jewel at the time of crude steel cases with beige plastic faceplates. Lian Li today is one of the most reputable case designers and manufacturers on the planet.

Introduction

For decades, Lian Li stood almost completely focuses on the design and manufacturing of top-tier PC cases. A few years ago, it entered the market with SFX-L power supplies, but the demand wasn't quite there. It was not until last year that the company took a significant step towards diversification with the introduction of all-in-one liquid cooling solutions. Apparently, the company found that diversification attempt successful and they are taking yet another step this year, with the introduction of a new SFX power supply this time around.

In today’s review, we are having a look at the SP750, Lian Li’s first-ever SFX PSU that rated at 750 W with an 80 Plus Gold certification. Lian Li certainly takes a peculiar diversification approach here, as their new PSU is not a regular-sized power supply, but an SFX unit, and one with a very high-power output to boot. This is a PSU for compact high-power gaming systems, quite possibly designed to match Lian Li’s own small case designs.

Lian Li SP750 SFX Gold, Fully Modular
Power specifications ( Rated @ 40 °C )
AC INPUT 100 - 240 VAC, 50 - 60 Hz
RAIL +3.3V +5V +12V +5Vsb -12V
MAX OUTPUT 20A 20A 62A 2.5A 0.3A
100W 750W 12.5W 3.6W
TOTAL 750W

Packaging and Bundle

We received the Lian Li SP750 in a cardboard box that is typical for consumer power supplies. There is nothing special about the box but it does provide enough protection to the unit for shipping. The aesthetic design also is relatively simple, with colored edges and based on a picture of the unit itself. It is apparent that Lian Li placed just as much effort as it was needed to create a proper modern packaging and no more than that.

Inside the box, we found a minimalistic bundle, even as far as a PSU is concerned. Aside from a gratitude card, and a very simple user’s manual, Lian Li only included the four black mounting screws. There are no cable ties or any other accessories accompanying this unit.

The Lian Li SP750 is a fully modular PSU and every cable can be detached, including the 24-pin ATX cable. All of the connectors and wires are black. The 24-pin ATX, the EPS, and the PCI Express cables are all individually sleeved as well, but the SATA and Molex connector cables are not. It is obvious that the cables are quite a bit shorter than regular ATX PSU cables, which is reasonable for an SFX power supply. This is a realistic choice considering that the PSU may be installed in very confined spaces where every millimeter counts but could become an issue for users wanting to use the PSU with a regular ATX case. What is strange here is the presence of three PCI Express connectors, because the SP750 clearly has the power output for two middle-range graphics cards but the lack of a fourth connector deprives users from that choice. The cables are supplied in a simple but effective storage pouch.

Lian Li SP750
Connector type Hardwired Modular
ATX 24 Pin - 1
EPS 4+4 Pin - 1
EPS 8 Pin - 1
PCI-E 6+2 Pin - 3
PCI-E 8 Pin - -
SATA - 8
Molex - 4
Floppy - -

 

The Lian Li SP750 750W SFX PSU

External Appearance

Perhaps the greatest feature of the Lian Li SP750 is its size – the company managed to get that high a power output out of a standard 125 × 63.5 × 100 mm / 4.92 × 2.5 × 3.94 in (W×H×D) SFX form factor design, making the PSU compatible with virtually every SFX case in the market. SFX cases designed to fit top-tier graphics cards usually can accommodate an SFX-L PSU as well, yet ensuring compatibility with any SFX-compliant case regardless of its target market definitely is a good thing.

 

Lian Li spent plenty of time worrying about the aesthetics of their new PSU. Parts of the chassis are brushed aluminum, with stickers covering most of the unit’s sides. A beautifully made label with the company logo can be seen right next to the cooling fan. The designer went as far as choosing screws with polished heads.

Despite the compact dimensions of the unit, the designer managed to place a small on/off switch next to the AC cable on the rear side of the PSU. The front side is densely populated with the connectors for the modular cables. The connectors are not color-coded but there is a basic legend printed on the chassis indicating what each connector is for. Besides, it is practically impossible for a user to insert a cable into the wrong connector, as each cable type has a different connector and the connectors are keyed.

Internal Design

The fan responsible for the cooling needs of the SP750 is a low-profile 92 mm product made by Yate Loon, a company whose products we frequently see in PC power supplies. There is nothing too special about this fan, as it has a simple double-bearing engine and a very high theoretical maximum speed of 3000 RPM. Double bearing fans are rare in high-quality PSUs because of their high noise output but they are extremely reliable.

The OEM behind the creation of the Lian Li SP750 is Helly Technology, a company we rarely encounter. The interior of the SP750 is densely packed, which was to be expected for an SFX design with that much power output. The filtering stage starts on the back of the AC receptacle, consisting of two Y capacitors, two X capacitors, and two filtering inductors in total. It is a simple filtering stage, which ought to be just as efficient as necessary.

 

There is only one bridge rectifier, on its own heatsink – if anyone can call that tiny piece of metal a heatsink. The heatsink is but a small flat piece of metal, smaller than the chip itself. Space is an issue in such a design and a larger heatsink would obstruct the installation of the switch but we have the feeling that the designer could do a little better here.

The APFC circuit is textbook, with the active components on the large heatsink across the edge of the PCB, one filtering coil, and a single capacitor. The large 400V/470μF capacitor is made by Nippon Chemi-Con, as all electrolytics in the unit are. There are two primary side inversion MOSFETs that form the heart of an LLC resonant half-bridge design.

On the secondary side, we can see the unit’s relatively huge main transformer surrounded by a thin metallic plate that acts as a heatsink for the 12V generating MOSFETs. As with all modern PSU designs, the 3.3V and 5V lines are derived via DC-to-DC conversion circuits. Most of the capacitors are polymer and are made by Beryl or, for those interested in the full name of the company, Zhao Qing Beryl Electronic Technology Ltd. Although this is the first time we have seen their products in a commercial PSU, Beryl is a reputable manufacturer, with a significant R&D division and global research collaborations on the advancement of, mainly polymer, capacitors.

Read on for our testing of this power supply.

Cold Test Results (~25°C Ambient)
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  • kdogg4536 - Tuesday, July 13, 2021 - link

    $140 I think I will pass until they build up a proven track record for that much money. One good review is a nice start but not enough to get my $140
  • kaidenshi - Tuesday, July 13, 2021 - link

    I'd take it at that price. I paid $99 for the 550W Focus SFX PSU in my mini-ITX build, and I would have gladly paid $50 more for a 750W from a company with a better reliability record if it had been available at the time.
  • Foeketijn - Tuesday, July 13, 2021 - link

    It always interests me, how these business plans enfold. If I was Lian Li and wanted to make such a A grade >100 dollar PSU, I would go to the best name brands, who are coincidental also in Taiwan.
    Make sure it has for example the best cooling fan and only Japanese parts. Just to make sure that first new product sets the stage for whatever comes next.
    Especially For a Taiwanese company, how come it's a Chinese PSU with Chinese parts (other than the fan). Why take the risk? Why not support your local industries?
    I try to avoid buying stuff from China as much as possible because I don't like the politics, and slavery. We vote with our spending. And I'm not Taiwanese. Fascinating
  • Jasonovich - Tuesday, July 13, 2021 - link

    I don't think geopolitical sentiments have any value on an IT website. Most brand names have their operations outsourced to China and some very fine quality electronic components come from China.
    If you're into main stream media and you believe everything your government says that's fine, enjoy your poison but slavery?
    What about Nike, Addidas, Apple, the list is long.I assume you're OK with Israel and apartheid ?
  • Questor - Tuesday, July 13, 2021 - link

    If it stays on topic, geopolitical statements can be valuable information to inform the consumer. When it veers off topic, then it has no value.
  • Foeketijn - Tuesday, July 13, 2021 - link

    Interesting reply. I am not saying China can't make propper stuff. I am just saying, the best PSU's are made in Taiwan. Why gamble with an relatively unknown producer.
    And ofcourse geopolitics play a role. I don't think Australians will outsource much to China ATM. Just like Indians won't likely outsource anything to Pakistan.
    It's not black an white. And has it's place on any website including IT. As long as it's ontopic.
    Off topic, you guessed right, I never buy anything from those brands. And that list is indeed very long. I am not against China, I don't like most things about globalisation (I do like that I can write this to you), and I hate slavery. Can't proof you didn't use slavery? I won't buy.
  • WonkoTheSaneUK - Thursday, July 15, 2021 - link

    "What is strange here is the presence of three PCI Express connectors, because the SP750 clearly has the power output for two middle-range graphics cards but the lack of a fourth connector deprives users from that choice."

    3 PCIe connectors isn't strange at all.
    750W is enough power to run a Nvidia RTX3080 or RTX3090 graphics card, and some of the AIB cards require 3 such connectors, instead of Nvidia's new, smaller single 12-pin connector, used on the "Founder's Edition" cards.
  • eldakka - Sunday, July 18, 2021 - link

    I think the comment was about ONLY having 3 connectors on a 750W PSU, as it is capable of running 2 GPUs each requiring 2 connectors for a total of 4, which this PSU doesn't have.

    I don't see it as a problem for gamers, as they'd most likely go for a single high-power card (max 3 connectors needed), but gaming isn't the only use case out there ;)
  • faaaaq - Wednesday, July 28, 2021 - link

    I just grabbed the 011 Mini deal from Newegg that came with this, for like $200. My first SFX PSU and man is it teeny tiny. Powering my heavily-overclocked 5950x, moderately overclocked 3080 FE, nine RGB fans, two water pumps (GPU and CPU are each on their own AIO cooling loops), and 4000mhz DDR4. No issues so far but Ive only had it since yesterday, replacing my Seasonic 750w ATX PSU and CoolerMaster H500. I had not looked up reviews before purchasing the case + PSU combo, so its nice to see the PSU ended up being very high quality. Nice.

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