@ Chewy,
Yes, reality watts in this case equals real electric unit of power watts. And not smoke and mirror watts.
If you have a brand of power supply that is falsely advertising output of 500 watts SAFELY, and you can prove (which would be difficult and costly) that the unit CAN NOT output 500 watts safely or caused you computer to catch fire, that (in the USA) would be grounds for a court battle against the vendor to seek damages.
Yes, reality watts in this case equals real electric unit of power watts. And not smoke and mirror watts.
If you have a brand of power supply that is falsely advertising output of 500 watts SAFELY, and you can prove (which would be difficult and costly) that the unit CAN NOT output 500 watts safely or caused you computer to catch fire, that (in the USA) would be grounds for a court battle against the vendor to seek damages.
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