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Thermaltake Floe DX 280mm, Dual Ring LED, 16.8 Million Color Software Enabled (TT RGB Plus/Alexa/Razer Chroma), AMD (AM5/AM4)/Intel (LGA 2066/1200), AIO CPU Liquid Cooler CL-W257-PL14SW-B

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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Saturday, Jun 8
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Size: 280mm


Style: Floe DX


Features

  • [Ring Duo fans] - total 18 addressable LED dual lighting Zones with self-lubricated hydraulic Bearing, the PWM fan has speed ranging from 500 to 1500 RPM for maximizing airflow while minimizing noise
  • [TT RGB Plus software/app] - Control fan speed and lights easily with a click, tap, or voice command via the patented TT RGB Plus software and TT AI voice control
  • [Sync with Razer Chroma] - experience synchronized gaming and RGB lighting effects on cooling systems and gaming gear via TT RGB Plus and Razer Synapse 3
  • [Works with Alexa] - Pair with an Alexa-enabled device (not included) and control lights, fan speeds, and even check the current weather condition by giving verbal commends via TT RGB Plus software/app
  • [Motherboard Sync option] - with TT Sync controller (cl-o015-pl00bl-a), lighting effects can be controlled by select 5V addressable RGB enable motherboards from as US, Gigabyte, MSI, and ASROCK
  • [High efficiency radiator] - Designed to support push-pull fan configurations for additional heat dissipation
  • [Reliable pump] - balancing low noise and high performance cooling with an operating speed of 3600Rpm
  • [Braided hoses] - engineered with durable rubber hoses minimizing Liquid dissipation
  • [Paint your build with 16.8M colors] - deliver 16. 8 million full spectrum RGB color with dynamic lighting effects to bring your gaming system to life

Description

The Thermaltake floe DX RGB is an all-in-one liquid CPU cooler with remarkable Ring Duo addressable RGB fans and water block. Comes with digital control LED rings on water block and fans. Furthermore, the universal socket design Supports both Intel and AMD motherboard. P/N: CL-W257-PL14SW-A PUMP: Rated Voltage: 12 V / 5V Rated Current: 325 mA / 0.4A Motor Speed: 3600 R.P.M WATER BLOCK Material: Copper FAN Dimension: 140 x 140 x 25 mm Speed: 500 ~ 1400 RPM Noise Level: 19.8 ~ 26.2 dB-A Rated Voltage: 12 V Max. Air Flow: 60.87 CFM Max. Pressure: : 1.74 mm-H2O Connector: 9 pin TUBE Length: 326 mm Material: Rubber RADIATOR Dimension: 312x 120 x 27 mm COMPATIBILITY Intel LGA 2066/2011-3/2-3/2011/1366/1200/1156/1155/1151/1150 AMD AM5/AM4/FM2/FM1/AM3+/AM3/AM2+/AM2


Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 13.7 x 8.3 x 6.3 inches; 4.5 Pounds


Item model number ‏ : ‎ CL-W257-PL14SW-B


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ October 3, 2019


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Thermaltake


Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ China


Best Sellers Rank: #2,021 in Water Cooling Systems


Customer Reviews: 4.5 out of 5 stars 1,493 ratings


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Jun 8

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Quiet and fantastic.
Size: 360mm Style: ToughLiquid
I shoehorned this cooler into my old Alienware Area 51 R2 in order to replace my now dead and woefully inadequate factory 120mm CPU liquid cooler. It was a beast of a job, though that's not fault of the cooler. The Area 51 wasn't designed for a 360mm radiator so I had to strip the entire case down the metal chassis in order to drill mounting holes for the new rad. It provided just the right amount of room and I set the fans to pull outside air through the rad. From that point, mounting the pump to the motherboard is just like any other liquid cooler: a piece of cake. My main goal with this setup was to finally be able to safely overclock my i7-5960x to at least the 4.0 GHz mark, but unfortunately Dell's stock BIOS seems to be fighting me every step of the way there since none of my configurations seem to take hold and/or are overridden by Command Center, but I'll just have to keep troubleshooting and experimenting. In the meantime it seems to be running quite happy at the stock "Level 2" preset at 3.8 GHz. Running a multi-core test on Cinebench maxed the temps out at 60C and under actual gaming loads with Cyberpunk (RTX 2080 Ti, 1440p, 144Hz, Ultra w/ Ray Tracing on), it was only topping out at 51C. It's also whisper quiet, which is a massive improvement from the factory fans. I have yet to do more extensive testing but I'm overall very happy with this cooler and the Toughfan 12s it comes with (I bought extras to replace the rest of the fans in the case). It's quite a bit more expensive than other 360mm coolers that'll probably do just as good of a job, but if you can get it on sale, it's a no brainer. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2022 by YALE70

  • Great cooling, quality hardware, flawed RGB controller/software
Size: 240mm Style: Floe
I am using this as a part of a new AM4 Ryzen 1700 build. Specs as follows: Case: Thermaltake View 32 PSU: EVGA Supernova 2 650w Graphics: EVGA Geforce GTX 1070 FTW CPU: Ryzen 1700 @ 3.8ghz Motherboard: ASRock AB350 Pro 4 Memory: Corsair Vengence 3000 DDR CPU Cooler (obviously): Thermaltake Floe Dual Ring RGB 240 TT Premium Edition The Good: It was easy to install and keeps the CPU very cool. This feels like a very solid product overall including the build of the cpu mount, radiator, cables, controller. The OC to 3.8 was dead simple and stays cool. Planning to go to 4.0 and doubt I will have any trouble (at least not from the cooler). I used different thermal compound than what came with it (Arctic Mx-4 which folks love or hate). I have always used Arctic products but hadn't tried MX-4 before. Will keep an eye on it but I am pleased with the performance so far. The lighting effects are painfully bad for the most part. The segmented LED effects are representative with everything bad about RGB in systems. They are cheesy and distracting. I prefer the aurora effect but the options are very limited. More on that under the bad. The effect is pleasing and subtle enough that it looks pretty good. It really shows off the benefit of the premium Riing fans over the normal ones in that you can do these type of fading effects. You can have the colors coordinate across the different fans/cooler which is nice, but they are offset using most of the effects which is good and bad. The good is that if that is what you are after, it is a cool thing. Aurora or solid colors look fantastic overall, very bright and vibrant. The Bad: The controller, for a supposedly premium product, is not compatible with other TT fans/controllers or my motherboard. So I have 2 controllers for Riing fans in my rig (for the non-premium ones that came with the case and the water cooler). The fans for the case are controlled through a button on the case, which is very limiting. Unlike other TT controllers, I cannot 'pause' on a color I like. So while the controller can cycle through 256 colors, you can only stop on one of the few base colors which is lame. Might as well get white fans. Of course you can always buy a better controller if you really want to coordinate anything better across your system (so you can pause on the color you like). So let's talk about the 'premium' controller now. It doesn't actually save your settings. You must wait for it to load into Windows to load your settings. So it defaults the annoying RGB spin cycle effect until it loads. The controller that comes with the case DOES, in fact, save your setting and doesn't require the OS at all. But that isn't even the best part. If your computer sleeps, the application fails to initialize the controller. So it will load up fine (it never quit upon sleep) but it loses the connection to the controller and the software is so poorly designed it cannot reconnect on its own. Only by forcing the app to close and restarting it can you again control... the controller. The app is not frozen, it works just fine and shows your settings. But changing profiles, settings, or anything has absolutely no effect so you are back in spinny rainbow land. This is absolutely unacceptable for a reported 'premium' product. This could be EASILY solved in a couple ways if TT would spend a few minutes with a decent developer versus blaming their customers (their hardware/BIOS/EFI settings) on their forums. 1. Save the preference to the controller (which FFS should be the default so it loads this way and does not depend on the OS or their software) or 2. The app should be able to reconnect to the controller even if it must poll the controller more than once (see below for TT's defense of the issue). 3. Restart the app when waking from sleep. This is crude but in fact, the only way to actually fix this given how terrible their app is. Some more creative folks have written scripts on their own accord that do this. Further, the effects they do provide you are too limiting. You cannot specify say two or three colors for Aurora... this would keep the colors in the cooler end of the spectrum which I would want, but instead MUST USE ALL THE COLORS. The software let's you use a finite amount of colors for some of the segmented effects but those all feel like some cheesy robotic lighting effect from the 50's rather than something high-tech. The Ugly: It's your fault. At least that is what TT would tell you. Go ahead, read their forums. This is covered pretty well and they state that it is your fault for having a 'newer motherboard' and it is a 'setting with your USB in BIOS/EFI'. Well, I can tell you that from what I can see, there is nothing I can do on my end to solve for this in EFI settings. This is such a terrible cop out for actually a defect in the engineering of their product/software. This is like Apple saying "you are holding it wrong" to customers when they had terrible engineering of their phones. People have posted scripts which basically automate the termination/restart of their app as a 'solution' and TT gives folks a pat on the back and "hope it works for ya". How about fixing your app? Hell, I could do it for them, it cannot possibly be that complicated. My intern could figure it out in 5 minutes undoubtedly. Blaming your customers for your poor design decisions is bad business and it makes me never want to buy another product from these people. I love my case, I think the cooler is outstanding overall. However, the software is defective and they know it but don't want to take responsibility for fixing it. Put that on top of the reports of them knowingly shipping defective controllers out to people and it just stinks. ==== If you don't care about RGB you may want to avoid this because you are likely going to be dealing with the same frustration as me and having spinny rainbows in your case constantly. Stab.me.in.the.eyes.with.a.spoon.please. Maybe you will get lucky and not have this issue. I just want to be able to set the color and forget about it. Easy, right? Theoretically, this could be fixed through some simple software updates, hopefully TT will make it so. If they do, I will update my review accordingly. So all this being said, I think this is a good product and should get 4 or 5 stars were it not defective by poor execution. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2018 by D. Wheeler

  • Stay away from this. Thermaltake is out to lunch with broken software and incompatibility.
Size: 280mm Style: Floe
UPDATE#2: After several updates and changing thermal pastes and software updates - the last one in Chinese or something similar - I have submitted an official complaint about the misleading practices relating to this and other Tt products. This riing will not keep up with the thermal load of a Ryzen nor a Threadripper. The latest update Which I had to get from their website actually broke both my audio drivers. I had to remove the Tt software and reinstall my audio and video drivers today. I have put in for an RMA with Thermaltake but who cares. I will never get my $150.00 back. Why is it not yet compatible with Aorus or have an adapter for any motherboard maker to allow control of the LEDs and fans? Why say they support processors that they can't keep cool? Both an AMD 1920X, and ryzen 7 2700X system - both vanilla - crashed from thermal max - BSOD and reboot to BIOS. I have tried everything to manage the temps but in the end it was futile. The temps look good for a few minutes or at 0% processor load, but as thermals build from demand this AIO just cannot keep the processor cool enough to keep running. FYI: I convert and compress video, photos and create music. I watch films and streaming services. I game lightly. Do yourself a favor and stay away from this brand for a while. It is currently out to lunch. I ordered two Cooler master tower fans to cool my Threadripper and Ryzen cpus. Yes I am have gone back to pipes and fans. They work great and keep thermal loads in check below or at 60C overnight and beyond. Thank you for reading this true rant. I am sorry if it ends up disappointing some folks. regards. UPDATE#1: The software continues to crash during boot, after an update to fix issues that were not even on the list of things broken... What are you doing Thermaltake? Sometimes it works and sometimes not - GAH! Sometimes my fans make up their own mind what to do. Next month I think I am going to replace this with a different cooler. Actually the only reason for going liquid was NOT cooling but decibels and excitement factor. At this point I think I am going back to hard pipe cooling. This liquid CLS-AIO is for the birds. As far as I can tell Liquid cooling is for bragging rights - not technically needed for thermal management. I am disappointed. I know I got ripped off by the misrepresentation of the product. HISTORY: My system build starts with an AMD 1920X on a Gigabyte Designare X399 Mo-Bo. With the latest bios update. The system is stable with G. Skill RGB 3200 ram. I have implanted an NVMe Pci-e Samsung EVO 960 drive and power from a Corsair RM850i - the non RGB version of their power supply. All of this is a vanilla system with NO overclocking and a stable OS, viewed on a Sceptre UHD monitor. THE COOLER: One of the recommended cooler manufacturers for this processor, on AMD's website, was Thermaltake closed loop AIO coolers. I chose this cooler on recommendation from Thermaltake and the lighting ability of it. I was not convinced of its efficacy for the first 48 hours after the install. I almost took it out because of temperature control issues. 71C to be exact, and BSODs every 20 minutes. Suspecting the Tt software controller was to blame, I reinstalled the awful stuff. THE SOFTWARE: this interface is just idiotic. Great idea - childish implementation. It is alpha software at best. I played around with it and noticed that - though workable - the control software was greatly flawed as follows, and not enjoyable to use. THE INTERFACE: is not resizable; there is no drag and expand, so on a UHD monitor, the whole interface is quite small unless one sets the windows text settings to a larger size. That causes the text to become cut off because the interface itself does not expand to fit the text. THE INITIAL SETUP: forces the selection of the 4th fan controller first. The interface will not work correctly if you don’t select interface 4 first. Then it allows selection of the first monitor... FAN CONTROL: NO FAN SPEED CONTROL on the interface for Floe Riing RGB drop down selection. It is only available in the Riing-Plus selection from the drop-down menus of the monitors which shouldn't work since this is the Floe dual riing RGB - not the Riing-Plus.. Guess what? That can only be selected on monitors down lists NOT related to where the actual pump is plugged into the CPU position - monitor 1, The software balks with an error in red text stating no connected device if you change the pump/cpu monitor to anything but what it actually is. The rest of the monitors apparently do not care if some other hardware is selected instead. Crazy stuff yeah? TEXT SIZE: None of the text on a UHD monitor is legible unless face planting the screen, or in my case using magnifying glasses, remember, The GUI is not resizable - but whatever is done to Windows resizing is mostly mirrored INSIDE the GUI frame so stuff gets cut off and overlaps. Truly I should not have to resize windows interface and resolution, etc. to make the interface usable, but if they require it of the user, then the GUI should expand to fit the required changes. TWEAKING RESULTS: After all of the playing around and reinstalling, and playing around more, I finally managed to control the temperature better. Now I span temps in C from about 35C to 65C depending on the load. BEFORE TWEAKING: the temperature spanned from 45C to 71C. Under a sustained load it grew roots at 71C. THE LIGHTS: are nice on the radiator and the noise level is lower than the tower air cooler I used on my old AMD FX-8350 Black processor. THE PUMP: Yet another big issue is the pump speed. As beautiful as it is with the RGD-LED factor, the pump speed/rpm is NOT controllable through the software or anywhere else. There is no real time data on how the pump is performing - not even rpm. I suppose they need that pump speed to stay static to fully disperse water against the fins of the water block? At a minimum, builders need to know if the rpm on the pump is correct. INITIAL ROUND-UP :> Does it keep the system running? Yes of course. Is it where I think it should be for that much money? Hell no. The software needs a total rework by someone who cares about control interfaces. The LED's need better flow control within the factory set patterns. The controls need to be fully legible on a UHD screen. There is a continuous disconnect between manufacturers for the AORUS LED controls. Even GIGABYTE apps have disconnects between their own control software. Some apps don't work on the new X399 chip-sets, even though they have advertised their app control center as compatible. ASUSs AORUS controls are not compatible with any builders except those that are in partnership with them. THE END RESULTS: I don’t feel like I won the battle. I like the hardware - truly. But there is no warm and fuzzy feeling for those who adopt early. There is still much wrong with the software control from Thermaltake that I have not even touched on, such as memory loss, glitchy selection processes, and support. Thermaltake and others are already getting ready to release (or are they already released?) new AIO cooling systems so watch for those and wait to adopt if you can.. I cannot wholly support this cooler because of the initial cooling control disconnect between hardware and the software interface. I have higher expectations for that much time and money invested. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2018 by By_Rant_Or_Ruin - truth.

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