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AI Workstations Push PSU Wattage Higher: Seasonic Talks to MEM Taiwan

July 08, 2026

AI workstation PSU trends shown in Seasonic COMPUTEX 2026 server power demo

Seasonic was recently interviewed by Micro-Electronics Magazine (MEM) Taiwan (新電子科技雜誌) about AI workstation PSU trends, including how the rise of AI workstations is reshaping power supply requirements — and what that means for the company’s product direction beyond its core gaming and consumer PC business.

At COMPUTEX 2026, Seasonic’s booth continued to feature products for DIY users and gaming PCs, but several key demos pointed toward a broader direction: AI workstations and enterprise-grade power.

 

AI workstations are changing PSU demand

 

Multi-GPU systems are pushing wattage beyond traditional high-end PC limits. Sea Sonic Electronics Product Manager Hank Liao stated that:

In the past, power supply demand in the high-end PC market was mostly concentrated in the 1000W to 1600W range. However, with the rise of AI workstations, multi-GPU systems have become a new application scenario, rapidly pushing power supply specifications upward.

AI workstations change the equation. Dual-GPU and four-GPU configurations are becoming more common for model training, inference, and content generation. At COMPUTEX, Seasonic demonstrated a system equipped with four NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell graphics cards, powered by two 3200W ATX power supplies for stable long-term operation.

Hank also noted that AI applications are gradually moving from large-scale data centers toward enterprises and individual users, creating new requirements for workstation-class power supplies.

 

Transient response becomes a key requirement

 

Transient response is also becoming as important as rated wattage. AI workloads can create fast, large power fluctuations as GPUs handle computation, data synchronization, and memory access.

This is where PSU design needs to go beyond simple output capacity. Seasonic’s PRIME ENTERPRISE line highlights stricter dynamic load validation, including EDPp (Electrical Design Point Peak), a standard designed to test a PSU’s transient response capability.

Customer requirements are expanding beyond efficiency and low noise to include dynamic load capability and long-term stable operation, Hank Liao explained.

From ATX to enterprise power

 

Beyond ATX, Seasonic also showcased CRPS (Common Redundant Power Supply) server power modules rated up to 5200W. These products are designed for servers, communications equipment, and enterprise computing platforms that require not only high output, but also reliability, remote monitoring, power management, and redundant power support.

 

Gaming and consumer products remain Seasonic’s core business, but AI workstations, edge computing, and enterprise systems are becoming important directions for future power supply development. These AI workstation PSU trends show why wattage, transient response, and enterprise-grade power design are becoming more important.

Read the full interview on Micro-Electronics Magazine Taiwan.
Note: Free registration may be required to access the full article.