Conclusion

Be Quiet's Straight Power 11 is a unit designed to provide premium quality and performance to advanced users. It stands but a step lower than the company's top-tier series, the Dark Power Pro, which bears a higher efficiency certification. On paper, the Straight Power 11 is an impressive product, with impressive quality and performance specifications. It is also worthwhile to note that this is one of the very few premier PSUs that features multiple 12V rails. Whether the presence of multiple rails is a good thing or not is a topic for debate – multiple rails are safer, as the protection circuitry will not allow a single cable or connector to draw the entirety of the unit’s power output and be damaged. But on the other hand, balancing the load between the rails is necessary and certain devices that require very high currents may even be unusable with such a PSU.

Aesthetically, the Straight Power 11 is very subtle but does stand out a little, mostly due to its proprietary fan finger guard. Other than that, the designers did the best they could to make the PSU aesthetically pleasing without drawing unnecessary attention, keeping stickers out of sight and painting literally everything black. At least some of the cables, which are the most difficult part to conceal when building a PC, could be replaced by ribbon-like cables that are thinner and more flexible than sleeved cables, yet the designer opted for uniformity and added sleeving to every single cable of the PSU.

In terms of electrical performance, the Straight Power 11 PSU does perform very well overall. Its power output quality is very good, with our instruments showing well-regulated, stable voltage lines and good voltage ripple/noise filtering. The unit does honor its 80Plus Gold efficiency certification, easily meeting the energy conversion efficiency requirements regardless of the load. Our only complaint is that the very low load efficiency of the Straight Power 11 750W PSU is poor. This does not affect the unit’s efficiency certification because the significant efficiency drop happens below the nominal load range but, as systems are becoming more and more energy efficient in general as laptop-like power management techniques make their way to desktops, it is likely to significantly affect the overall energy consumption of newer and future computers.

Meanwhile when it comes to noise, it's worth noting that Be Quiet! is a company that primarily designs and markets products for low noise output. Which in the case of the Straight Power 11 series makes it difficult for us to give it a positive evaluation. The 750W unit that we reviewed is indeed relatively quiet under normal operating conditions, but that can change very quickly when the unit is heavily loaded or if the ambient temperature is high. Although the very aggressive thermal profile of the Straight Power 11 maintains very low operating temperatures that will surely improve the longevity of the PSU, it also places the Straight Power 11 behind the competition when it comes to acoustics, which does not bode well for a product that low noise operation is the basis of its entire marketing plan. In particular, the fact that the fan speed is load-driven rather than temperature-driven would seem to be to the PSU's detriment.

The Straight Power 11 PSU series stands at a peculiar place in the market, with Be Quiet! marketing it as a premium series, yet next to their actual premium series, the Dark Power Pro. The overall performance of the Straight Power 11 750W PSU that we reviewed today is by all means a good PSU, yet incapable of competing with the equally priced offerings of other manufacturers. Given that it's an 80Plus Gold-certified PSU, and considering its overall performance, the Straight Power 11 750W PSU should be retailing for less than $100 in order to remain competitive. 

Hot Test Results (~45°C Ambient Temperature)
Comments Locked

4 Comments

View All Comments

  • Death666Angel - Wednesday, November 7, 2018 - link

    Thanks for the review! I generally like BeQuiet stuff. I have a Dark Rock Pro 2 that I bought used for cheap as my CPU cooler and a Straight Power E9-CM 480W PSU that I also bought cheap used. That gives me a pretty much silent PC in combination with a Core i5-4570S @ 1V @3.6GHz and a 960 GTX graphics card. This seems to have missed its mark a bit, they are usually pretty good about the noise levels. Their Dark Rock Pro coolers trade blows with Noctua ones while usually being a bit quieter.

    One thing I would like to ask about this statement: "the efficiency diving below 75% when the load is lower than about 40 Watts."
    Will you be able to maybe give us an article detailing idle power consumption of current generation (maybe even older generation) hardware, to see how relevant such a deficiency is? If I were to buy a 750W PSU, it would be for a top of the line overclocked 8 core CPU and a smiliar, top of the line overclocked GPU. A reasonable overclock on air would likely still mean the system draws less than 500W with a handful of HDDs/SSDs and no weird stuff. What would be the idle power draw of such a system. Maybe compare an overclock via offset to one via fixed voltage? Is 40W a reasonable target for idle power draw of modern, high end systems? How are the default BIOS settings regarding power saving mechanisms set?

    And to be fair to BeQuiet, at 40W, the absolute power consumption of the PSU is still rather small. The Corsair SF450 Platinum has about an 80% efficiency rate at 40W (cold test) and the BeQuiet about 70%. If my maths checks out, the power draw at the wall is 57W vs. 50W. If your PC idels 24/7/365 at German electric bill prices (about 24C/kWh for me), you'd pay 14€ more vs more efficient designs. Yes, it's a deficiency they need to work on for the next generation, other manufacturers are better about it. But I'd still pick this PSU than one bundled with a standard PC case or one from Thermaltake, Chieftec, LC-Power and other more or less no-name brands without reviews. :)
  • Gastec - Thursday, November 8, 2018 - link

    My old PC (i7-860, GTX 670, 8 GB DDR3 1600 MT/s, two SSDs, one HDD, 1 cpu fan, 2 case fans) idles at 35-40 W. According to this article https://www.anandtech.com/show/11180/the-nvidia-ge... their system with a GTX 1080Ti idled at 76 W. Other newer systems out there seem to idle at ~90-95W (which I find a bit too much).
    On Amazon.de: the be quiet! Straight Power 11 750W is €125, the Corsair SF-450 Platinum costs €108, but it's a 450W PSU. The 600W SF-600 Platinum costs €120.
    The least expensive Corsair 750W Platinum PSU, the HX750 is €140.
  • Ravenmaster - Wednesday, November 14, 2018 - link

    Last month I RMA'd a bequiet! Silent Loop 280mm CPU cooler because after 2 months the pump went faulty and started rattling like mad. This week I had to RMA my bequiet! Dark Power Pro 11 (1200w) because it was making a popping sound when i switched it on, followed by sparks coming out of the back. Had put my old EVGA PSU back in and switch the CPU cooler for my old Corsair H100i. The older parts are louder but at least they're not faulty and they do the job. Never gonna buy bequiet! components again. Their case fans are second to none but their components are trash for some strange reason.
  • s.yu - Wednesday, November 21, 2018 - link

    Hence the exclamation mark? ;)

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now