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From what we have tested , when its below -10 degress celcius outside our perimeter insulation is drasticly more efficient . You are right to say that full foam is a little bit more efficient when its above -10 outside but just the fact to not see whats going on with your plumbing, the fact that a perimeter insulation reduce the hearing of the pump noise is 2 good reasons for me to choose that insulation indtead of foam . When you choose the right components and dont insert cheap material in your spa you should not have any problem with a perimeter insulation . Have you experienced any issue wihthat type of insulation?
Quote from: Vortex Spas Canada on August 19, 2013, 08:10:15 pmFrom what we have tested , when its below -10 degress celcius outside our perimeter insulation is drasticly more efficient . You are right to say that full foam is a little bit more efficient when its above -10 outside but just the fact to not see whats going on with your plumbing, the fact that a perimeter insulation reduce the hearing of the pump noise is 2 good reasons for me to choose that insulation indtead of foam . When you choose the right components and dont insert cheap material in your spa you should not have any problem with a perimeter insulation . Have you experienced any issue wihthat type of insulation?Is this with your Hybrid Heatpump option, or conventional resistance heat element? I've been wondering if a spa manufacturer would employ heatpump technology in their water heater. It must be air to water, I assume there must be a blending of cabinet and outside air for this to work best. Then the heatpump can move heat from cabinet air to the water when it is cold out and discharge heat to outside air when cooling the water in high temperature days. Or does it have a remote condenser? I would love to see a diagram of how this works.
Quote from: vangoghsear on August 21, 2013, 12:38:34 pmQuote from: Vortex Spas Canada on August 19, 2013, 08:10:15 pmFrom what we have tested , when its below -10 degress celcius outside our perimeter insulation is drasticly more efficient . You are right to say that full foam is a little bit more efficient when its above -10 outside but just the fact to not see whats going on with your plumbing, the fact that a perimeter insulation reduce the hearing of the pump noise is 2 good reasons for me to choose that insulation indtead of foam . When you choose the right components and dont insert cheap material in your spa you should not have any problem with a perimeter insulation . Have you experienced any issue wihthat type of insulation?Is this with your Hybrid Heatpump option, or conventional resistance heat element? I've been wondering if a spa manufacturer would employ heatpump technology in their water heater. It must be air to water, I assume there must be a blending of cabinet and outside air for this to work best. Then the heatpump can move heat from cabinet air to the water when it is cold out and discharge heat to outside air when cooling the water in high temperature days. Or does it have a remote condenser? I would love to see a diagram of how this works.The heatpump dont work below 0 degrees , all the testing have been made with a normal gecko 4kw heater
Envoy from HotspringVortex Spa Nitro (There is no contest)
It's pretty damn awesome TwinCitiesHotSpring. Don't knock it till you try it! Spoiledrotten... I looked at the Envoy at the local store here. Sat in it etc. I'm telling you the Vortex Spa I bought... the Nitro blows it away. BLOWS IT AWAY. The jet configuration, the number of jets, the seat configuration, where the circulation system is located, the options on deck and the price. All much better. To make it clear... the Vortex was described by visitors as a BMW or Cadillac while the Hotspring Spas were described as Toyota or Ford. My problems I experience were not with the spa. I'd order it again tomorrow. Still have never sat in a tub like it in my life. Kudos to the shell designers!