
Deepcool PQ750M 80+ Gold
750W 80+ Gold, Fully Modular, no native 12VHPWR - adapter required for RTX 40-series.
Budget 750W Gold. Deepcool's PSU division has improved significantly. Good value alternative to Corsair.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
GPUs this PSU can power
DeepCool PQ750M Gold Review: Best Value 750W Semi-Modular PSU in India
DeepCool PQ750M Gold: 750W Semi-Modular at the Right Price for India's Mid-High Builds
The 750W tier is the sweet spot for a growing category of Indian gaming builds - systems with RTX 4070 Super, RTX 4080, or RX 7900 XT as the GPU. These cards pull 200–280W under load, and with a modern i5 or i7 CPU on top, system TDP pushes comfortably past what 650W handles with confidence. The DeepCool PQ750M Gold fills this space at ₹7,500–9,500 - a fair price for what it delivers.
India price range: ₹7,500–9,500. Available at MDComputers, PrimeABGB, and Amazon India.
What Semi-Modular Means and Why It Works Here
DeepCool's PQ750M uses a semi-modular design: the ATX 24-pin and CPU EPS 8-pin cables are permanently attached (you always need those), while PCIe power cables, SATA chains, and Molex are modular - plug in only what you use. It is a practical middle ground. Full modular is cleaner; non-modular forces unused cables. Semi-modular lands in a sensible position for the price.
The platform inside the PQ750M has been reviewed by TechPowerUp - the verdict is positive: clean voltage regulation, acceptable ripple, and good voltage hold under load. Not Seasonic Focus GX levels of precision, but well above what budget-tier units deliver. 80+ Gold at 750W means roughly 90% efficiency at 50% load - around 375W draw on the wall for typical gaming loads.
The fan is a 120mm hydraulic bearing fan - quieter at low loads (it runs slowly until temperatures require more airflow), which matters if your build is in a quiet room. At 750W sustained draw, it spins faster and is audible but not disruptive.
Connectors on the PQ750M:
- Fixed: 1x ATX 24-pin, 1x EPS 4+4 pin
- Modular: 2x PCIe 6+2 (standard), additional cables for SATA/Molex
- For RTX 4080 or RTX 4090: check if the included PCIe cables support 16-pin (12VHPWR) adapters - the PQ750M includes a 16-pin adapter for high-TDP cards
5-year warranty. DeepCool has improved their India service presence - warranty handled through Acro Engineering (their India distributor). Keep your invoice; Acro requires it for RMA.
India Pricing and Power Supply Context
At ₹7,500–9,500, the PQ750M Gold undercuts the Corsair RM750e (₹9,000–12,000) and Seasonic Focus GX-750 (₹11,000–14,000) significantly. The trade-off is semi-modular cabling and a 5-year warranty instead of 10 years. For builders who replace systems every 4–6 years anyway, the 5-year warranty is practically as good.
Indian power note: 750W units with active PFC handle India's variable grid well. The PQ750M has active PFC, which smooths input power fluctuations. In cities with frequent load shedding, a UPS is still recommended - the PSU protects against brownouts better than cheap units but a sudden hard cut with no UPS is hard on any PSU over time.
DeepCool distributes through Acro Engineering in India - available at MDComputers (Kolkata), PrimeABGB (Kolkata), and Amazon India. Check seller identity on Amazon; Acro Engineering-sold listings carry warranty.
Who Should Buy the DeepCool PQ750M Gold
This PSU is right for:
- RTX 4070 Super builds (220W TDP) - 750W gives clear headroom for i5/i7 system overhead
- RTX 4080 builds (320W TDP) - 750W is the minimum I recommend; 850W is better but 750W works at stock
- RX 7900 XT builds (315W TDP) - same story as RTX 4080; 750W is workable
- Budget-conscious mid-high builds where saving ₹2,000–4,000 vs Corsair RM750e matters
Skip the PQ750M if:
- You are running an RTX 4090 (450W TDP) - get at minimum 850W, ideally 1000W
- You want the longest possible warranty - 10-year units from Corsair or Seasonic are worth it for flagship builds
- Your build is fully modular-only - the semi-modular fixed cables are manageable but not as clean as full-mod
Questions
At stock settings - yes. The RTX 4080 draws around 320W TDP. With a typical i5 or i7 CPU adding 100–150W, system peak is 420–470W. A 750W PSU at 60–65% load is efficient and within safe limits. For an i9 CPU + RTX 4080 pushing extreme load simultaneously, step up to 850W.
Semi-modular has two permanently attached cables: ATX 24-pin and CPU EPS. Both of these are always used, so the "extra cable" problem does not apply - you need them in every build. The modular PCIe and SATA cables are what actually vary by build. In practice, semi-modular is nearly as clean as full-mod for the average build. Only in show-piece cable management builds does full-mod matter.
DeepCool handles India distribution through Acro Engineering. The 5-year warranty covers manufacturing defects. RMA process involves contacting DeepCool support and Acro Engineering - it works, but is less streamlined than Corsair/Rashi. Budget extra time if you ever need RMA.