Thermaltake Smart BX 650W Bronze
650W 80+ Bronze, none-modular, no native 12VHPWR - adapter required for RTX 40-series.
Official India stock. Full warranty through the brand's India service network, standard RMA if anything goes wrong.
Full specs
Where to buy Thermaltake Smart BX 650W Bronze in India
Expect to pay roughly ₹4,100-4,500 for the Thermaltake Smart BX 650W Bronze in India right now, depending on offers and seller. I always recommend buying from retailers that give a proper GST invoice - it's what makes your India warranty claim smooth later.
In my years running a PC store, PrimeABGB (Mumbai) and Vedant Computers (Kolkata) have also been consistently reliable for verified stock - compare before buying.
Thermaltake Smart BX 650W Bronze India Price and Review
Budget Thermaltake, Sized Right
The Smart BX1/BX3 line spans 550W, 650W, and 750W, all 80+ Bronze certified, priced from ₹4,275 up to ₹6,450 depending on wattage and exact SKU. I'm covering the 650W here as the reasonable midpoint — it covers the widest range of budget-gaming builds without stretching into overkill or leaving a mainstream GPU short on headroom.
This series is not modular in most configurations, which is the trade-off you accept at this price point. Cable management takes more effort, but for a budget build where every rupee matters, that's a fair trade for the price.
What 80+ Bronze Gets You at This Price
Bronze certification (82%+ efficiency at 50% load) isn't the most efficient tier, but for a budget build running an RTX 5060 or similar mainstream GPU, the practical difference versus Gold is small in absolute rupee terms on your electricity bill, and the money saved is better spent on the GPU itself. What matters more at this price tier is basic protection circuitry (OCP/OVP/SCP at minimum) being present and functional, which Thermaltake's Smart BX series has.
India Context
Budget PSUs are exactly where corners get cut on components that matter during grid instability — the capacitors and protection circuits that keep a voltage sag from becoming a fried GPU. Thermaltake's Smart BX series isn't a premium unit, but it's a known-brand budget option rather than an unbranded OEM box, which matters when you're deciding what protects a ₹30,000-40,000 GPU purchase. If your area sees frequent brownouts, pairing this with a basic voltage stabilizer is a smart ₹1,000-1,500 add-on.
Who Should Buy / Who Should Skip
Buy this if: you're building a budget-to-mainstream gaming PC around an RTX 5060 or similar, and want a known-brand PSU without paying Gold-tier prices.
Skip this if: you're pairing with an RTX 5070 or above — step up to Thermaltake's Toughpower GF A3 850W Gold sibling or Super Flower's Leadex III Gold 850W instead for better efficiency and headroom.
Questions
550W for entry-level builds with a low-power GPU. 650W for mainstream RTX 5060-class builds. 750W if you want extra headroom or a slightly higher-tier GPU. 650W is the safest default for most budget gaming builds.
It adds effort but isn't a dealbreaker in most budget cases, especially ones with decent rear cable routing space. It's a reasonable trade-off for the price savings versus a modular unit.
It has standard basic protection circuitry, which is the minimum you should look for. It's not a premium unit, so pairing it with a voltage stabilizer is a sensible extra step if your area has unreliable grid power.