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Hot tub electrical question
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Don Y[_3_]
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Hot tub electrical question
On 10/6/2015 5:55 AM,
wrote:
On Mon, 05 Oct 2015 23:09:43 -0700, Don Y
wrote:
On 10/5/2015 10:47 PM,
wrote:
On Mon, 05 Oct 2015 22:02:24 -0700, Don Y
wrote:
That depends on where you live! : Here, it's rarely cool enough
to NOT have (or want) the ACbrrr to be on!
Sounds like Arizona. ;-)
Here in Florida we relish the days when you can open the windows
(Nov-Mar) and the hot tub feels good about the same time. In the
summer it is just swapping water with the pool and not really used at
all.
I don't think I know anyone with the "combination" hot-tub/pool
configuration. People tend to either have pools or hot tubs but
not usually both.
There is also a downside of using them in the hottest portions of
the year because those also tend to be the driest. It is not
uncommon to get out of a pool and find yourself enveloped in a
cloud of "steam" -- as all of the water on your body evaporates
quickly (which usually leaves you *freezing* cold -- even in 110F
temperatures stepping out of 105F water!). So, the humid parts
of summer (i.e., Monsoon) tend to be more comfortable *in* the
water.
We've considered purchasing an "infinite pool" to get the advantages
of a pool (exercise) and hot tub (soaks) -- without losing all
that land (and water!) to the alternative.
Different strokes I guess.
When the humidity is in the 80s, evaporation is not an issue but I
have been out there and I know what you are talking about.
Moving here was the first time I ever encountered that sort of
evaporative cooling! Getting out of a pool typically just left
you *wet*. No big deal to get out and walk around to some
other point and reenter. Or, sip a beverage, etc.
Here, getting out was like stepping directly into a FREEZER!
A completely unexpected experience. Drove home the principle
of evaporative cooling (perspiration, etc.) in a way that a text book
could NEVER explain!
My pool and spa are not a combo unit, they are about 50 feet apart.
There is just a common pipe that connects the spa overflow to the pool
suction via the vent and another valve that bleeds off a little pool
return water into the spa.
Ah! I've only ever seen the spa as a sort of "wading pool" attached
to the "real pool" (different pump/filtration/heater). So, you "soak"
(heat soak) in the spa, then slide over a little dividing wall into
the pool (which is typically much cooler)
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