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Given a specific heating element, if 220v is applied to it, it will heat 4 times faster than if 110v is applied to it.
Actually, looking them up Doc, you are right. It seems they vary the voltage pushed through the one element.Apply ohm's law and stir. So I agree in full with your post. I just always thought it interesting that if apples to apples pump wise, the 220 would actually be a bit less energy efficient due to losses. I went 220 on mine, I didn't want mine to struggle to heat up. But yeah, it is not a substantial amount especially with a well insulated hot tub.
Quote from: Dr. Spa™ on September 12, 2012, 03:33:36 pmGiven a specific heating element, if 220v is applied to it, it will heat 4 times faster than if 110v is applied to it.Not exactly. The 220v spa has more elements, it doesn't push more watts through one. Most convertible spas I've seen list two ratings such as 1 kW and 4.5 kW. The 4.5 kW element set would only be used with 220v spa, as it would draw 40.9 amps on a 110 circuit. It only draws 20.45 amps on a 220v circuit.This is wrong, see below.
if you run at 110V you can't heat while you're in it running the jets which may matter in colder climates. Unless you have a real issue with doing so, go with 220v.
End of the day and I'm tired, but I'm pretty sure this is still an over-simplification. If you had 2 tubs, one 220, one 110 that were turned on for four hours, both tubs would get to the same ultimate temp and both would have been losing some heat for four hours. So does a warmer tub lose heat faster than a cooler tub? (My addled brain truly doesn't know). If not, then its a wash and the 220 wins since the pumps aren't turned on as long.