Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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#17
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You can an electric heatpump for your pool.
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#18
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#19
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The house we purchased 3 years ago had a rooftop solar heat system for the pool.
During our 2 years of research prior to purchasing in TV I had come across a preponderance of reviews/insights from solar heat owners who hated them. Many had removed them or when the failed - didn’t replace. That left me skeptical about their value. Once here and after learning-experiencing the system that came with the house - 100% LOVE IT! Beginning in March - the solar system has no issue keeping pool temp at 87 - a perfect temp for my wife and I. As time passes and we get into those months when it’s hot all day long - and now the pool temp is exceeding 87 via ambient temperatures (solar off) - we then use the solar system to cool the pool temp back down to 87. That’s done by shifting the filter cycle/turnover period from daytime to nighttime. Even during the hottest days - nights are always cool. The hot pool water cycles across the roof during the night that then cools it back down to our desired temp. Doing that gets us through the hot muggy summer and into sept where we then flip the filter/turnover cycle back to daytime to maintain 87 degrees. That gets us somewhere around end of November early December. That’s it. Rooftop solar - for maintaining pool temp - is useless until end of feb-March. Yes - 3 months with no pool access. That’s not a problem for us as the house also came with a hot tub. We fire that up from nov thru feb then shut it down when the pool is back in play. For us - solar pool heating is the only way to go. Previous owner had an electric pool heater in place - but we’ve never used it. By now it’s probably rusted out. The one other benefit from the solar system is when we get temps below freezing for more then a few hours. Instead of “winterizing” the solar system I just cycle the pool water thru the solar system to keep any of the components from freezing/breaking. I installed a variable speed pool pump a year ago after I converted the pool from a tablet system to salt. It only costs me a few cents to run the pool water thru the solar heater during freeze cycles. To go off topic for a smidge - variable speed pool pumps are the only way to go. We went from single stage to variable and it’s a night/day difference in terms of efficiency/control and cost. And so it goes….
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Ribbit |
#20
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With regards to an electric heater raising your bill by $200 - not sure where you got your numbers, but my pool is always 88-89 during winter, and it adds between $30-$40/month to my bill. I knew that before I ever installed it based on the cost of electricity, the size of my pool, and the BTU of the heat pump (with electric get the biggest heat pump you can get - currently 144K BTU - a bigger heat pump only costs a few hundred $$ more, but will last longer, heat the pool faster, and is more efficient). During the summer, of course, it adds $0 to my bill. Natural gas/propane will heat faster, but both cost quite a bit more than electric for the same amount of heat. Expect to spend anywhere from $200-$850 a month with a propane pool heater or $100-$400 a month with natural gas. If you have a pool with a built in hot tub, you probably want a gas heater to ensure you can use the hot tub when you want it. Ideally, I would have a small gas heater dedicated to the hot tub, and an electric heater for the pool. Automation can coordinate two heaters easily. I went with a standalone hot tub - more comfortable, and far less costly to run. It's usually at 100-102, and costs $8/month on my electricity bill. |
#21
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I have a gas heater and run it when necessary for the pool and spa. Solar heat from way above in the summer months.
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#22
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Everything you described is exactly what I would expect - works great when you don't need it, sort of OK when you start needing it, and not at all when you really do. The cooling part is a nice feature, but with a cage over my pool, it's never gotten above 90 in the summer... and water at 90 feels very cool when it's 100 out. With regards to a variable speed pump - if a pool builder doesn't include one as standard equipment they are not worth hiring. This is basic 101 for a pool now a days. I can run my pump at 25% speed for the majority of the day - only ramping up when the heater needs to run (generally 1-1.5 hours/day). If I run my pump for 10 hours/day, at 25% it costs me $1.91 for a month. At 100% it costs me $35.21. Quite a difference! |
#23
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#24
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bdrybob: The product Solar Trek of Ocala uses is Heliocol solar panels, which are SUPPOSEDLY engineered to specifically mount to the trusses on your roof. The pictures you include look like they didn't even try to mount this properly? Jack's Solar uses a different product.
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#25
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After living in SW Florida for 15 years I can confirm that Solar Heating doesn’t work during the Winter months. Electric heat pumps aren’t much better. We had a heat pump in Fort Myers and if you wanted to heat the pool during Winter months, you’d have to run it for days. Natural gas is the best option, especially for Snowbirds. Unfortunately, Natural gas was not available in SW Florida. Winters are significantly colder here compared to Fort Myers…so if you want to enjoy your pool during Winter months…go natural gas!
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#26
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#27
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Ribbit Last edited by Graspher; 02-09-2023 at 05:45 AM. |
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