Recipes in Fahrenheit, weather in Celsius, scientific data in Kelvin, and a handful of historical scales that occasionally turn up in old texts. The ChrysoKit Temperature Converter handles all eight in one place, with every scale updating live as you type.
Why use it
Mental Celsius-to-Fahrenheit math is famously slippery, and most converters cover only the two or three modern scales. ChrysoKit gives you the full set side-by-side, so you can sanity-check unusual conversions without flipping between sites.
How to use the Temperature Converter
- Type a value in any of the eight scale boxes.
- Every other scale updates instantly.
- Watch the 3D thermometer and the context cards (feels like, phase, reference point, blackbody colour) react to the value.
- Tap the copy icon next to any field to copy that value.
- Open Quick Refs to jump to common anchors like body heat, freezing, boiling.
Features worth knowing
Eight scales at once
Celsius, Fahrenheit, Kelvin, Rankine, Delisle, Newton, Reaumur and Romer all update together.
Real-world context
The context cards translate the number into a feeling, a phase of water, the nearest familiar reference point and (for high temperatures) the approximate blackbody colour.
3D thermometer visual
A live thermometer rendering anchors the value visually, useful when you want a quick gut-check of "warm or cold" rather than a precise number.
Pro tips
- Body temperature is roughly 37 C, 98.6 F and 310 K. Memorising one anchor makes the rest feel less abstract.
- Kelvin and Rankine both start at absolute zero, so they never go negative. If you see a negative value, it is a typo.
- For oven temperatures, round to the nearest 10 F or 5 C. Recipes are not that precise.
- Delisle is one of the few scales that runs backwards (0 = boiling). It is unusual to meet outside historical texts.
Privacy first. The Temperature Converter runs entirely in your browser. Nothing you enter is sent to a server.
Keep the Temperature Converter open the next time a recipe, forecast or physics problem crosses scales. It is faster and more accurate than mental math.
Open the tool: Temperature Converter →