💻 Cool Your System, Elevate Your Game!
The Lian Li GA2P36B Galahad II Trinity Performance 360 AIO CPU Liquid Cooler is engineered for high-performance cooling with a daisy-chainable radiator and customizable aesthetics. Compatible with Intel and AMD sockets, it features a maximum pump speed of 4200 RPM, optimized water flow, and whisper-quiet operation, making it the perfect choice for gamers and professionals alike.
Product Dimensions | 15.59"L x 1.26"W x 5.12"H |
Brand | Lian Li |
Wattage | 3.6 watts |
Cooling Method | Water |
Compatible Devices | Desktop |
Noise Level | 22.03 dB |
Maximum Rotational Speed | 4200 RPM |
Air Flow Capacity | 108.29 Cubic Feet Per Minute |
UPC | 840353044586 |
Manufacturer | Lian Li |
Item model number | GA2P36B US |
Item Weight | 7.28 pounds |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 15.59 x 5.12 x 1.26 inches |
ASIN | B0CDFFQXYK |
Date First Available | August 2, 2023 |
B**N
AIO Coolers
This is a very radical way to cool your CPU. They are high speed in both pimp and fan speeds. They can get get noisy (loud) at full speed but they keep the CPU very cool under max loads. I can run my Ryzen 5950 @ 4700 mhz all cores and the temps are 70* or less under full load a bit noisy tho' but that's the trade off. No problem.
X**L
First noise then died
Great pump at first, quiet and powerful. Then noise started (as Reddit post showed because of design flaw). I reached out to Lian li they honored the warranty and “started preparing the request” but it has been a week and a half and I have not heard from them. Meanwhile the pump died completely. I have no choice but to buy competitors product. Had the substitute arrive quickly I would consider the brand for future business but faulty product and slow service - definitely the reason to look elsewhere.
A**R
Good, Not Great - First one failed in 3 months
Did a new build and decided to put in an AIO for the first time. It fit my Fractal Design Meshify 2 XL ATX Full Tower Case without issue and the installation was pretty straight forward. It is quiet and keeps my AMD 7800X3D at 43C temp during normal loads.However, my pump start making a rattling noise about two months after installation and failed in the third month. The RMA process was not the easiest on the Lian Li website, but I did get a new pump (sans fans) in about two weeks. Fingers crossed on the new one.
A**R
Revision 1 is junk
Amazon is still shipping the first version of this product. The pumps burn out in under a month. Assuming the pump works it is a great product so I suggest immediately initiating a rma theough lian li if you receive a r1 product vs r2. It isn’t even worth I stalling the r1 for how quickly the pumps die.
A**D
Will actually cool an Intel CPU at 253+ Watts
I have an RTX 4090 and games become CPU limited. I have an i7-13700 set to 5.5 GHz on all cores. My Corsair 280mm was not keeping up and it would throttle playing BF2042. This one keeps it below 72°C. It does well with OCCT power tests. It is wider than most AIOs so it might not fit in your case but it might be the best one, maybe the only one that can actually do the job.
B**T
Easy, quiet, and controllable power cooling - Till it died
Edit: Leaving the review below. New information.So, after owning this for 3 months, the pump started making noise and my temps started suffering. I looked into the issue and it's apparently a known issue. Lian Li posted about it in their own Reddit forum, but have otherwise not announced it publicly.So far, it took Lian Li a week to get back to me about the issue, but they immediately replied that they are sending a replacement. I am aware the pump issue was a revision 1 issue, and the early revision 2 pumps apparently also had issues, so they hopefully are sending me out the revision 3. Meanwhile, they pulled all the devices from sale to fulfill support requests while they get this sorted, so at least they did that.I loved this when it worked, it was super quiet and performed well. I hope the replacement not only works, but is reliable. Till they get this sorted, I'd advise staying away from this product though. I would avoid used products as well, or verify the serial number, which should start with a 1 for rev 1, and a 2 for rev 2 and 3. Untill they can confirm this issue is resolved, I'm changing my review to a 2 star from a 5 star. I hope Lian Li can either solve this issue, or make it right so I can get a reliable AIO. I want this one to work though. I chose it for a reason,Original review:Looking for a high performance AIO without a lot of RGB is hard in todays market, so thank goodness the LIan Li Trinity Performance was here. Only minimal RGB on the pump head, and none on the 360 fan radiator was great.The AIO itself is pretty easy to install. Radiator fans just need a fan header. Pump has a fan header mount, a USB mount for control via the Lian Li software, an SATA power hookup, and an optional RGB hookup to sync it to your MB without the controls.By default, the pump is on Quiet, and runs at around 2500 RPM. You can leave it steady, use the Lian Li software to control it in 3 preset speed or on a curve, or you can let your MB (or whatever other software using your MB) to control it. At high speeds, it makes a little noise, but not a lot, but your fans should mask it pretty easily, and you get declining returns for higher speeds. At low speeds, it's extremely silent.Then fans at full blast are loud. The radiator probably doesn't help there. However, they can slow down tremendously when there's little to no load, and they're nearly silent when the PC isn't really chewing on something hard, and you can set a curve to manage them to keep them quiet in all but the most stressful CPU loads.Mine is keeping my overclocked 12900K nice and cool, with only CPU stress tests able to get the temps above 70C. I don't have the fans hit the 100% mark at less than 80c (they're at 70% around 70C), so I rarely hear the fans on idle, and at most loads there's just a slight fan noise. Having a great case like the Lian Li 216 helps a ton as well, as the great airflow helps with the AIO, and I have it mounted at the top. I can have most of my daily tasks running, a few web browsers, 1-2 web games, a video, a few office apps, all running and still be under 30C with almost no case noise because the fans are quiet when under 50% power.The software is great too, only in that once I set the pump controls to the motherboard, and turned off the RGB lights, I never needed it again, so it was one less piece of software I needed to run on the PC to control something. The lighting options were all nice as well, but since I specifically didn't want RGB, being able to turn it off was great, and leaving the understated Lian Li infinity mirror in the case with no lights adds a great effect.Picture shows the AIO mounted in the top of my case. I have 2 large intake fans in the front, and the one smaller exhaust fan on the back, as well as the AIO fans blowing out the top. Thermals are greatOne tip, make sure the radiator is above the CPU block at at least one point. This will save the block fan, as eventually all AIOs will get a little air in the line, and if the air accumulates in the block, you'll kill the motor since it's unlubricated, and you'll lose cooling on the device. This is a tip for any AIO.For the price, this is amazing. For what I wanted, it was perfect. A super silent case that can ramp up under extreme loads if I need it to, and highly customizable support to run the fans and RGB how I want to. Reviews I read had it outperforming much more expensive AIOs as well. Definitely no regrets on going for this over air cooling.
A**W
Three months and dead pump.
Unfortunately, the pump died after three months. No warning signs, no noises, nothing. All the lights turn on, fans spin, but the pump header does not detect on any of my motherboard headers. Just turned off my PC for the night, booted up the next morning and noticed my CPU fans running at full speed and shutting down due to CPU temperature. Unfortunately, I did not read any of the reviews of this, and I will definitely be going elsewhere as this was my first Lian Li AIO and have not had any sort of issues with other brands such as NZXT or Corsair. Currently going to see how the warranty process is, will update if necessary. For now, I'd steer away. It cooled my 13900k flawlessly when it worked but unfortunately can't recommend this at all.**Edit**Lian Li got back to me within 24 hours of a warranty request and has shipped out my replacement after 4 days with a FedEx tracking number with no questions asked.After doing further online research, apparently there has already been V2 revisions that have had to be looked into due to pump performance problems. Lian Li added an additional magnet to V2 that would prevent the pump from grinding on lower RPMs. They also stated that this wouldn't be a problem if your pump was always running at high RPMs. The problem with V2 is that even though the magnet might have helped a little bit in this regard, the pump unfortunately still has to hit low RPMs on shutting down your PC which will lead inevitably to another dead pump. This has led to a V3 already in the works per online sources.This seems like a huge flop from Lian Li. Steer away from this one.
K**N
Does a fine job cooling my Intel 14900KF
Easy install, no hiccups. Haven't had any problem with thermal throttling in games so should have no problem with any other use case. The fans are whisper quiet.
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