Vašku,chtělo by to se méně chovat jak hulvát a občas refreshovat informace,pokrok v PC sféře jde mílovými kroky. Žádná moderní deska v desktop PC nemá napájení měniče CPU z 5V větve. A jestli o nějaké víš,dej vědět označení. Jediné kde je to možné,jsou ty tvoje speciály co spravuješ,tam nemám ánung,ale troufám si tvrdit že pár deskotpů jsem už viděl a rozhodně ani jeden z nich neměl napájení z 5V větve.
(to že ten měnič z 5V umí u s pousty desek bežet je věc druhá,pak jde ale doprdele účinnost)
To že si pamatuješ starý ATX a první ATX P4 zdroje s posraným L494 a v zapojení polomost neznamená že se to používá dodnes,většina výrobců tohle řešení kopla do prdele už před 6-8 léty.
EDIT: Malá citace z wikipedie:
ATX12V standard
As transistors become smaller on chips, it becomes preferable to operate them on lower supply voltages, and the lowest supply voltage is often desired by the densest chip, the central processing unit. In order to supply large amounts of low-voltage power to the Pentium and subsequent microprocessors, a special power supply, the voltage regulator module began to be included on motherboards. Newer processors require up to 100 amperes at 2 volts or less, which is impractical to deliver from off-board power supplies.
Initially, this was supplied by the main +5 V supply, but as power demands increased, the high currents required to supply sufficient power became problematic. To reduce the power losses in the 5 V supply, with the introduction of the Pentium 4 microprocessor, Intel changed the processor power supply to operate on +12 V, and added the separate 4-pin P4 connector to the new ATX12V 1.0 standard to supply that power.
Modern high-powered graphics processing units do the same thing, resulting in most of the power requirement of a modern personal computer being on the +12 V rail. When high-powered GPUs were first introduced, typical ATX power supplies were "5 V-heavy", and could only supply 50–60% of their output in the form of 12 V power. Thus, GPU manufacturers, to ensure 200–250 watts of 12 V power (peak load, CPU+GPU), recommended power supplies of 500–600 W or higher. More modern ATX power supplies can deliver almost all (typically 80–90%) of their total rated capacity in the form of +12 V power.
Because of this change, it is important to consider the +12 V supply capacity, rather than the overall power capacity, when using an older ATX power supply with a more recent computer.
Low-quality power supply manufacturers sometimes take advantage of this overspecification by assigning unrealistically high power supply ratings, knowing that very few customers fully understand power supply ratings.[1]