External Appearance

Much like with the Photon series, the Hive is hardly any different from a typical black ATX PSU. The only thing that differentiates it from the core design is the fan finger guard, which is not a separate part but a honeycomb pattern punched on the steel chassis itself. Aside from the sticker with the electrical specifications of the PSU at the top of the chassis, there is virtually nothing else that would break the monotony of the black, plain chassis.

This is a semi-modular unit, with some of the cables hardwired and others removable. The connectors for the modular cables can be seen at the front of the chassis, with a basic printed legend indicating which connector corresponds to each cable. Do note that the connectors for the PCI Express cables are red and the connectors for the 6 pin and 6+2 pin cables are different.

Internal Design

A rather standard, high speed 135 mm fan from Globe is found beneath the honeycomb finger guard of the Hive 850W PSU. The S1352512HH is a sleeve bearing and a maximum speed of 1800 RPM, meaning that at lower speeds it can handle itself well, but at maximum speed it could get awfully loud. Of course, a thermal control circuitry adjusts the speed of the fan according to the load and the temperature of the unit, so we will see how it truly behaves during our testing.

Sirfa is the OEM behind the Rosewill Hive 850W. Although they are not very reputable among enthusiasts, Sirfa is a good OEM and they released several relatively good platforms during the past few years, yet they also faced a couple of mishaps with a certain low-cost platforms. Our sample is based on a slightly modified version of the popular Direct12 Bronze II platform that has been around for a couple of years.

The filtering stage is textbook in design, with four Y capacitors, two X capacitors and two filtering inductors. A small and plain heatsink provides cooling to the main rectifying bridge, while the APFC components are mounted on a long heatsink alongside the edge of the PCB. A very large inductor and a 400V/680μF Rubycon capacitor are the passive PFC components. A half-bridge inversion configuration feeds the main transformer, the output of which is then processed to a single 12V line. The 5V and 3.3V lines are then derived via DC-to-DC conversion circuits.

Despite the presence of the DC-to-DC conversion circuits, the low efficiency transistors prohibit this platform from attaining a better efficiency certification. The electrolytic capacitors and the polymer capacitors on the secondary side are supplied by Teapo and Nippon Chemi-Con respectively. The presence of so many Teapo capacitors is likely to negatively affect the opinion of enthusiasts, as they are not the most reputable supplier. The build quality of the Hive 850W is rather good, albeit the design is dense and a bit messy. A lot of glue has been used to maximize the mechanical strength of the PSU. 

Introduction, Packaging & Bundle Cold Test Results
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  • doggface - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    Great review. I really appreciate that you test these less capable units. Reading this helps me to realise why those 1200 watt PSUs are so good. To see what happens when the cooling isn't sufficient.

    Also that this psu seems like it would be good for systems that might generally sit at around 2-400watts and occasionally pulls 5-600+ on a more epic game.
  • BrokenCrayons - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    Nice review. The PSU looks pretty decent up to around 500 watts and, realistically, that's about the maximum draw of most gaming computers even those running two GPUs (presuming about 100 watts for the CPU and then another 125-ish for each video card, plus some extra wattage for drives and other bits) so it's more than enough. As I've never found a reason to run more than one mid-range graphics card, I personally can't see buying anything rated over 450 watts. The price is a little too high, but aside from that, its good enough.
  • Oxford Guy - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    "I personally can't see buying anything rated over 450 watts."

    In that case you can get a platinum PSU on sale (rebate) for less than the price of this one.
  • cykodrone - Saturday, August 22, 2015 - link

    Anything lower than 'gold' is junk. This thing is a budget brand 'bronze', blech, no thanks. That's why it's only a 3 year warranty, low quality components. It doesn't even look that great, enthusiast like snazzy, especially modders with window cases. Punching sheet metal with a honeycomb pattern has been around for years already, *yawn*.

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