The Fatal1ty 750W unit comes in a traditional 'Fatal1ty' styled box. Red being the principal colour. There are various details on the front and rear of the box showing that this unit is SLi ready and comes with an attractive 5 years warranty.
Within the box there is an assortment of extras. Inside there is of course the unit itself, an instructions manual, a small zip-up bag containing modular cables. Aside from this there is only the power cables.
The bundles cables are quite special because they do not conform to the typical nylon netting type covering. All the cables that come with the Fatal1ty 750W incorporate a flat insulating plastic that surely is aimed at optimising the cable management within the case. To me this is a fantastic idea, it keeps cables together and to a low-profile thus making it easy to keep things tidy inside your case.
Of the modular cables included, we have 4 x 6+2-pin PCI-E - 6 x Peripheral - 2 x Floppy - 6 x SATA. Hot wired into the PSU we have - 1 x 20/24-pin ATX - 1 x 8-pin CPU - 1 x 4+4-pin CPU. So things have been kept to a minimum with the already wired cables. There is plenty of options to choose from with 8 sockets on the PSU to plug into.
The Fatal1ty 750W certainly looks like an impressive unit. It comes in a deep grey colour on one side there is a metal plate attached featuring a specification table for the rails. Unfortunately though, if you are to mount this at the bottom of your case, this plate will be tucked away facing the motherboard tray and instead you will have a plain grey side facing you.
The ratings indicate that the unit provides up to 18A for each of the 4 +12v rails. The 5v rail provides 30A and the 3.3v 28A. More than capable of running multiple graphics cards.
This unit features a 135mm double ball-bearing fan with red LED. Slightly larger than most PSU's that feature 120mm fans.
Opening the Fatal1ty 750W unit up, you will notice the insides are quite cramped. The heatsinks are moderate in size. Some units have bigger heatsinks than those found in this particular unit. The cabling does seem quite messy, but they aren't touching any of the other components or heatsinks. The only other thing worth mentioning is that the key capacitor has a tolerance rating of 100C+ and our unit claims to not exceed 75C at continuous power.