YT Saver

Dell D220p 01 Power Supply Pinout 2 -

| Dell Pin | Dell Signal | -> | ATX Pin | ATX Signal | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1,2,15,16,17,19 | Ground | -> | 3,5,7,13,15,16,17 | Ground | | 3,4,5,20 | +5V | -> | 4,6,19,20 | +5V | | 9,10 | +12VA | -> | 10,11,12 | +12V | | 12,13,14 | +3.3V | -> | 1,2,11 | +3.3V | | 11 | 3.3V Sense | -> | (Not on ATX) | Leave unconnected OR tie to +3.3V | | 18 | PS_ON# (Green) | -> | 14 (Green) | PS_ON# | | 8 | PWR_OK (Gray) | -> | 8 (Gray) | PWR_OK | | 7 | +5VSB (Red/Black) | -> | 9 (Purple) | +5VSB | | 6 | +12VB | -> | Not used | (Drive rail only) |

Here is the for revision 2 of the D220P-01. (Revision 1 had slight differences in the sense wire – this is specifically for the D220P-01 REV:02). Dell D220p 01 Power Supply Pinout 2

For years, techs have salvaged these units for their surprising build quality (Delta is known for robust components) or attempted to adapt them for standard motherboards. Miswiring this unit will cause immediate short circuits, motherboard damage, or trigger the PSU’s "latching" protection mode. Why the D220P-01 is Different from Standard ATX Before we list the pins, understanding why the pinout is unique is crucial. A standard ATX connector has distinct colors (Orange 3.3V, Red 5V, Yellow 12V, Black Ground, and a Green PS-ON). The Dell D220P-01 abandons the color code entirely. | Dell Pin | Dell Signal | ->