Please see the most recent updates in the "Where did the .com name go?" thread. Posts number 16 and 17.
... or should I just not try it right now?
Yep, a 9600 actually and I was asking around about a week ago about moving to a 450 and was advised to actually go to the 460 because it was a better card. Unfortunately that was about the time my Motherboard crashed and I ended up having to buy a replacement system which only has a 300Watt PSU. Bummer.You've answered your own question and in a cautious manner. I can't recall your video card? It was a nVidia 9500, but didn't you just replace it? Even with that card you are running short on wattage, IMO. Start to stress the system and you'll probably see video corruptions, at the least.
Better safe than trashing what was a good part (CPU, RAM, video card) and having to replace it.
Yea, the price alone would make me think long and hard before buying, lol. Having just bought a new computer, the ability to now go out and buy a PSU is on hold, especially with Christmas as close as it is. . .priorities, lol.:salute:When the 1000 watt PSU was introduced, I scoffed at the notion of needing one. These days, a 1000 watt PSU doesn't seem unreasonable. With each upgrade, I look cautiously at my 650 watt Antec and hope for the best.

Gera,
This isn't about checking specs to see if the system I was buying would work with the Video Card. This is more about the reality of what I could afford.
(1) It's Christmas and there are obligations (A computer isn't really a necessity).
(2) A decent system (i5 or i7) would run me anywhere from $650 on up (based on the local Stores I have access to)
(3) I have had several offers to build a system in the future that would take into consideration cost as a major factor. If I had phone numbers for those folks I might have contacted them when my system cratered and checked, but I didn't so I couldn't.
(4) Did I mention that a computer isn't a necessity?
(5) I looked at the computers I had available to me (Best Buy) and I bought the one that was comparable to what I already had (Dual Core, 4Gig (mine had 8), 3.2Ghz CPU (mine was 3.0) and I already knew I was going to put my 9600GT into it. What Power Supply was in it was of little consequence, they weren't going to swap it out just for me. I paid $450 for it and that was actually about $100 bucks more than I paid for the one I already had in it's original state.
So, no, checking the specs wasn't really an option. Thanks for asking though!:salute:
HiWozza, I already had SpeedFan and so I loaded it back up and took a look. There isn't an option to monitor PSU Voltage and I have the latest version of SpeedFan. There is an option under the "Charts" tab for Voltage, but it doesn't produce a readout, just a blank screen. Can you elaborate?:salute: