Conclusion

Fractal Design released the new Celsius coolers with the aim of bringing an all-around competitive product into the market while staying true to the company’s motto - “less is more”. The Celsius coolers are aesthetically simple, without RGB lighting and fancy colors; on the contrary, the designer of the Celsius has been trying to make the otherwise large devices as inconspicuous as possible and blending in with the environment inside a high-end PC. The all-black design and the minimal appearance and travel of cables will definitely help advanced users and modders assemble some of the cleanest-looking systems out there.

With that said, no cooler could succeed while focused on aesthetics alone and Fractal Design certainly did not forget about performance. Although the Celsius S24 or S36 will not be breaking any thermal performance records, the Scandinavian coolers seem to deliver very good thermal performance while maintaining exceptionally low noise levels. The ceramic pump is exceptionally balanced, very quiet, with no whining noises coming from it even when it is running at maximum speed. Fractal Design’s Dynamic X2 fans appear to have been an excellent choice for these coolers, providing good performance with relatively very low noise levels.

The discussion on thermal performance becomes complicated not when trying to compare the Celsius coolers to other products, but when trying to compare them between themselves. In our testing, the huge radiator of the Celsius S36 only has a performance advantage when the cooler's fans/pump are running at high speeds, and even then the advantage is apparent only when the thermal load is very high. This scenario hardly makes any sense with a single modern CPU – even one that is heavily overclocked – as even HEDT CPUs don't product the 300W+ of heat it takes to really dfiferentiate these coolers.

On the other hand, with the fan/pump speeds lowered, the Celsius S24 not only delivers just as good of thermal performance as its bigger S36 counterpart, but it actually manages to outperform the S36 during most of the tests, all while producing significantly lower noise levels. We believe that the only scenario that would give the S36 a sizable advantage is the expansion of the kit to cover more energy-hungry parts, but we also feel that the small ceramic pump will be outclassed if it finds itself having to deal with a 400 mm long radiator and multiple cooling blocks. Meanwhile the S36 has the inherent disadvantage of the extra size and higher noise levels that the third cooling fan unavoidably introduces, making it an even less appealing choice. Alone it might be a more interesting cooler, but the S24 performs so well that it puts the S36 in a bit of a tough spot.

Availability of the Fractal Design Celsius in North America is relatively limited, which is not unusual for a product from a European company that has just launched. The Celsius S24 and S36 are currently available in Amazon for $109 and $119 respectively, which are not very competitive prices considering the overwhelming competition that they have to overcome. They may be two of the least noisy AIO coolers that we have ever tested, but retailing that much higher than similar (and very popular) products is not going to help Fractal with their sales. The price of the kits will most definitely come down as more vendors bring in some stock, and the Fractal Design Celsius S24 will most likely become a favorite for users whom prioritize simplicity and quiet operation.

As for the Fractal Design Celsius S36, we will leave it up to the reader to decide if the extra size, noise and cost are worth the slightly better performance under very heavy thermal loads. But, according to our test results, the Celsius S24 definitely is a more sensible choice for most users.

Testing Results, Low Fan Speed
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  • ratbert1 - Friday, June 2, 2017 - link

    Please add a water cooled graphics card to the loop and see if it can cool both. That seems to be what these coolers are about.
  • makerofthegames - Friday, June 2, 2017 - link

    I was looking at these for a new build, because I might upgrade it to a custom cooling loop after a few years. An S36 would be a bit overkill for just a single consumer-grade CPU, but it would save the cost of a radiator if I upgrade. I'd still need a reservoir, GPU cooling block, and probably a pump, but it would at least save on the radiator.

    I might base my choice off what GPU I end up getting, since a long one would collide with the S36 in the case I'm using. And a radiator isn't that expensive, anyways.
  • nekronimus - Wednesday, October 18, 2017 - link

    You could mount the S36 (pump) on the most popluar GPU using the kraken G12 GPU mounting kit. You could then buy a seperate CPU cooling block (50$) and reservoir and you're done. It's lot cheaper than mounting the S36 on the CPU and buying a seperate GPU cooler (starting 120$). Graphic cards are replaced more often than CPU's, so in the long run the first setup would also be way more cheaper, just by a new mounting kit and you're good to go.
  • LawRecords - Saturday, June 3, 2017 - link

    I'm building a new machine with a Phantek Evolv ATX case and the Celcius S24 cooler for the CPU. My GFX card is an air cooled Asus STRIX 1080 Ti. What is the best location of the radiator in that case, given that setup? I read somewhere that having the radiator at the top will be sub-optimal due to heat rising from the GFX card. Not sure if that's true. But regardless, where do you think will be best to minimize noise (want it as quiet as possible) for decent cooling?
  • maximumGPU - Sunday, June 4, 2017 - link

    you can always put it up top fans in pull rather than push. That way you won't take heat for your gpu, but more importantly (for me at least) you'd have positive air pressure in your case to keep dust out.
    To be honest though front or up won't make much difference in either temps (1-2 deg difference max) or noise, just go with whatever looks best to you and is easiest to install.
  • nekronimus - Wednesday, October 18, 2017 - link

    Depends on how hot your 1080 Ti is running now. GPU's start throttling way faster than CPU's. I would avoid putting it in the front of your case, adding hot air to your GPU. Your CPU might run a degree or two colder but your GPU would have to endure an additional 3-5 degrees (depending on how well you airflow is through your case) whilst having less room before it starts throttling...
  • sultan_khan - Sunday, June 4, 2017 - link

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  • kushakizz - Thursday, June 8, 2017 - link

    does the extra tube come with it for your video card...and if so all i have to do is buy a vc block riight and connect? or is there more to it
  • JohnLinc - Tuesday, June 13, 2017 - link

    thisistotesthedelayforweb
  • TechEnthusiast - Friday, June 23, 2017 - link

    Can we see real life scenarios now? I mean you've tested them using environments that nobody will use at home. Which is understandable if you want to achieve the maximum cooling capacity. But would like to see more normal examples on particular pc cases. I can also go to the north pole and see what temps i get there you know

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