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Author Topic: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?  (Read 8546 times)

Spayedkitty

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Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« on: July 07, 2017, 10:05:53 am »
Hello,

We are narrowing down hot tub models. We like the Geneva and Envoy.  We are wanting to also look at the Bullfrog A7L. The problem with Bullfrog is that the closest dealer is 1.5 hours away.  The Geneva and Envoy are at about the same price point.  We have yet to price the Bullfrog.

Please give opinions on these models.  I want the good and bad.  Also what seems like a fair price for these models?  We are in Indiana.  So far we have seen a price difference on the Geneva of 3 grand depending on the dealer.  The lowest price we have found is 10,900.00 (no stereo) and the Envoy is in a similar range.

We are needing a tub for therapy, especially for my hips, pelvis, back, and neck.  We also want something that is going to last and be easy to maintain.

We have not wet tested yet.  We have an appointment to do so on the Geneva and Envoy.

Thank you in advance.

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Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« on: July 07, 2017, 10:05:53 am »

Spatech_tuo

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #1 on: July 07, 2017, 01:03:41 pm »
Try to wet test them all on the same day or same weekend at least. You are talking about 3 very good brands so you're going in the right direction. The distance of 1.5 hrs to one of the dealers is potentially an issue and not something we generally recommend but sometimes depending on where you live your options can be limited. Next time you talk to that dealer ask up front what they might charge for service (yes even though the spa is under warranty they can charge for the trip out to your spa, especially when its that far away).
220, 221, whatever it takes!

bud16415

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #2 on: July 07, 2017, 02:39:39 pm »
We have had our Geneva for a few years now and are still quite happy with it. It is billed as a circuit tub where each seat hits a different area  and by moving thru the seats you get a full massage. I was a little skeptical about that but I have to say we normally trade places at least 3 times in the 3 main seats and each one is something different. I would say there are 3 of the 6 seats you will use 90% of the time in the Geneva and the 4th location isn’t a seat. There is a large jet on the edge of the foot well (I think the new Geneva has two of these.) and you can float over this jet and work places you cant get to any other way. When wet testing make sure to try that out on knees and hips etc. along with being able to divert power to the jets you want with things set to the middle position the massage is really nice in all 6 locations if you get a gang in there for socializing. Dealers don’t a lot of time explain the little things a tub has that you find out later. Ours also has a setting called whirlpool and it sends the water around a big circle. It is a very relaxing mode and great when you just want the hot water therapy.

I can’t comment much on the other ones as I have only been in the Envoy a couple times at a friends and it seemed nice as well.   

We paid about 12k for ours and that was a couple years ago.

d00nut

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #3 on: July 07, 2017, 03:17:00 pm »
The lowest price we have found is 10,900.00 (no stereo) and the Envoy is in a similar range.

Super cheap.  We sell for more

Spayedkitty

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #4 on: July 07, 2017, 03:40:25 pm »
Try to wet test them all on the same day or same weekend at least. You are talking about 3 very good brands so you're going in the right direction. The distance of 1.5 hrs to one of the dealers is potentially an issue and not something we generally recommend but sometimes depending on where you live your options can be limited. Next time you talk to that dealer ask up front what they might charge for service (yes even though the spa is under warranty they can charge for the trip out to your spa, especially when its that far away).

You are right, unfortunately I think we will be crossing Bullfrog off of our list.

Spayedkitty

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #5 on: July 07, 2017, 03:42:30 pm »
We have had our Geneva for a few years now and are still quite happy with it. It is billed as a circuit tub where each seat hits a different area  and by moving thru the seats you get a full massage. I was a little skeptical about that but I have to say we normally trade places at least 3 times in the 3 main seats and each one is something different. I would say there are 3 of the 6 seats you will use 90% of the time in the Geneva and the 4th location isn’t a seat. There is a large jet on the edge of the foot well (I think the new Geneva has two of these.) and you can float over this jet and work places you cant get to any other way. When wet testing make sure to try that out on knees and hips etc. along with being able to divert power to the jets you want with things set to the middle position the massage is really nice in all 6 locations if you get a gang in there for socializing. Dealers don’t a lot of time explain the little things a tub has that you find out later. Ours also has a setting called whirlpool and it sends the water around a big circle. It is a very relaxing mode and great when you just want the hot water therapy.

I can’t comment much on the other ones as I have only been in the Envoy a couple times at a friends and it seemed nice as well.   

We paid about 12k for ours and that was a couple years ago.

Would you purchase a Geneva again?  How much do you spend on chemicals and is it easy to maintain the water?

bud16415

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #6 on: July 07, 2017, 11:11:30 pm »
We have had our Geneva for a few years now and are still quite happy with it. It is billed as a circuit tub where each seat hits a different area  and by moving thru the seats you get a full massage. I was a little skeptical about that but I have to say we normally trade places at least 3 times in the 3 main seats and each one is something different. I would say there are 3 of the 6 seats you will use 90% of the time in the Geneva and the 4th location isn’t a seat. There is a large jet on the edge of the foot well (I think the new Geneva has two of these.) and you can float over this jet and work places you cant get to any other way. When wet testing make sure to try that out on knees and hips etc. along with being able to divert power to the jets you want with things set to the middle position the massage is really nice in all 6 locations if you get a gang in there for socializing. Dealers don’t a lot of time explain the little things a tub has that you find out later. Ours also has a setting called whirlpool and it sends the water around a big circle. It is a very relaxing mode and great when you just want the hot water therapy.

I can’t comment much on the other ones as I have only been in the Envoy a couple times at a friends and it seemed nice as well.   

We paid about 12k for ours and that was a couple years ago.

Would you purchase a Geneva again?  How much do you spend on chemicals and is it easy to maintain the water?

I would purchase the Geneva again. It is a very simple tub to maintain once I figured out what system worked best for us. It came with the frog inline feeder system that involves changing cartridges. We started before the @ease product was on the market so we were using bromine as a sanitizer and a mineral cartridge as a supplement of some kind. The bromine or now the @ease cartridge was supposed to last a month and the minerals 4 months if I remember right. I had a heck of a time with the bromine as it seemed the levels were up and down and I was constantly pulling the cartridge and changing the dispensing rate on it. Add to that they are not cheap. After about 6 months and several water changes hoping starting over would correct the messed up water levels I gave up on the cartridges and went with the simple much lower cost method of dosing the tub each night after we use it based on the usage with the Dichlor and bleach method. This method has proved to be the simplest and best and least costly method. When I clean and refill the tub I add Dichlor 1 tablespoon for the two of us using the tub for about an hour. The chlorine level goes up to 4 or 5 PPM and by the next evening it is 1 or 2 PPM and perfect for bathing. Of course I adjust the PH and such in the beginning as needed. After about 3 weeks I watch the stabilizer level and when it gets around 50 PPM CYA (that’s in the Dichlor to help the chlorine release slower. Once it hits 50 that’s all you need and then I switch from Dichlor to regular old cheap Clorox. I add about quarter cup in place of the Dichlor for the rest of the life of the water. Once every week or two I give it a shock with non Chlorine shock. It brings the sparkle back to the water and you will learn when to do it. If we have a heavy bather load with friends over I might double the Dichlor or Clorox if we skip going in for a day I just skip treating it. About once a week when I get in I take a microfiber cloth and wipe down the water line and the seats takes about 5 minutes and every other week I pull the filter and hose it off with hot water, another 5 minutes. I doubt I spend more than 30 minutes per month on labor, and maybe $10 a month on supplies.

When we go away for a week I just shock it good with Dichlor or Clorox before we leave taking it up to 10 to 20 PPM. If I’m going away for 2 weeks to a month I pop in a @ease cartridge.       

TemptingDestiny

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #7 on: July 08, 2017, 08:00:20 pm »
Yay, congrats on the hot tub shopping!

Caldera's Utopia series is similar to Hot Spring's Limelight series. (The Pulse is same footpring in size, without a lounge or "Captain's Chair)
Even though the Geneva looks similiar to the Envoy- they are still quite different in the design, jetting, filtration, controls...etc.

I most definitely agree that soaking these two could make a big difference in your decision.
Good Luck!

Spayedkitty

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #8 on: July 08, 2017, 10:20:57 pm »
Yay, congrats on the hot tub shopping!

Caldera's Utopia series is similar to Hot Spring's Limelight series. (The Pulse is same footpring in size, without a lounge or "Captain's Chair)
Even though the Geneva looks similiar to the Envoy- they are still quite different in the design, jetting, filtration, controls...etc.

I most definitely agree that soaking these two could make a big difference in your decision.
Good Luck!

So, do you think the Envoy is a better quality tub?  The dealer at Hot Springs told me the Hot Springs is a Bentley and a Caldera is a Yugo.  He said it's not comparing apples to apples.  I like the cabinet on the Caldera much better than the Envoy.  Is the filtration better on the Envoy?

Spayedkitty

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Hot Springs Envoy or Caldera Geneva
« Reply #9 on: July 08, 2017, 10:34:56 pm »

I would purchase the Geneva again. It is a very simple tub to maintain once I figured out what system worked best for us. It came with the frog inline feeder system that involves changing cartridges. We started before the @ease product was on the market so we were using bromine as a sanitizer and a mineral cartridge as a supplement of some kind. The bromine or now the @ease cartridge was supposed to last a month and the minerals 4 months if I remember right. I had a heck of a time with the bromine as it seemed the levels were up and down and I was constantly pulling the cartridge and changing the dispensing rate on it. Add to that they are not cheap. After about 6 months and several water changes hoping starting over would correct the messed up water levels I gave up on the cartridges and went with the simple much lower cost method of dosing the tub each night after we use it based on the usage with the Dichlor and bleach method. This method has proved to be the simplest and best and least costly method. When I clean and refill the tub I add Dichlor 1 tablespoon for the two of us using the tub for about an hour. The chlorine level goes up to 4 or 5 PPM and by the next evening it is 1 or 2 PPM and perfect for bathing. Of course I adjust the PH and such in the beginning as needed. After about 3 weeks I watch the stabilizer level and when it gets around 50 PPM CYA (that’s in the Dichlor to help the chlorine release slower. Once it hits 50 that’s all you need and then I switch from Dichlor to regular old cheap Clorox. I add about quarter cup in place of the Dichlor for the rest of the life of the water. Once every week or two I give it a shock with non Chlorine shock. It brings the sparkle back to the water and you will learn when to do it. If we have a heavy bather load with friends over I might double the Dichlor or Clorox if we skip going in for a day I just skip treating it. About once a week when I get in I take a microfiber cloth and wipe down the water line and the seats takes about 5 minutes and every other week I pull the filter and hose it off with hot water, another 5 minutes. I doubt I spend more than 30 minutes per month on labor, and maybe $10 a month on supplies.

When we go away for a week I just shock it good with Dichlor or Clorox before we leave taking it up to 10 to 20 PPM. If I’m going away for 2 weeks to a month I pop in a @ease cartridge.       
[/quote]

Almost 30 years ago I remember my x mother n law who owned a spa company using bleach in the hot tub.  I don't recall too much other than the bleach poured straight from the bottle.  I was wondering if the Frog cartridges were more of a gimmick that would require more money.  An Artesian dealer told me he quit ordering his floor models with the Frog system because customers were complaining of either too much chemical being released or not enough and that the cost is too expensive.  I don't know yet the Geneva or the Envoy.  I have to talk to both dealers again this week.  I have really been leaning towards the Geneva.  May I ask what you have yours placed on and do you live in a cold climate?  The warranty says it must be on a concrete slab or a deck.  One Caldera dealer told us gravel and another told us Slab or deck.  We plan on doing a slab.  I can't wait to get it.  Thank you for the information.  The fact that you would purchase the same model same brand again says a lot!

TemptingDestiny

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #10 on: July 09, 2017, 01:44:21 am »
Yay, congrats on the hot tub shopping!

Caldera's Utopia series is similar to Hot Spring's Limelight series. (The Pulse is same footpring in size, without a lounge or "Captain's Chair)
Even though the Geneva looks similiar to the Envoy- they are still quite different in the design, jetting, filtration, controls...etc.

I most definitely agree that soaking these two could make a big difference in your decision.
Good Luck!

So, do you think the Envoy is a better quality tub?  The dealer at Hot Springs told me the Hot Springs is a Bentley and a Caldera is a Yugo.  He said it's not comparing apples to apples.  I like the cabinet on the Caldera much better than the Envoy.  Is the filtration better on the Envoy?

The Envoy (Highlife series) is still a level on it's own. There is no apples to apples when talking Geneva vs. Envoy other then similar shell shape.

Although the cabinetry can be a huge factor in your landscape DESIGN, it does nothing for the functionality of the tub itself. Wet testing will be what matters, because you are looking for relief and comfort. The Envoy has the ability to do super easy watercare as well.
Test soak. Then make a decision!

Tman122

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #11 on: July 09, 2017, 08:02:45 am »
Yay, congrats on the hot tub shopping!

Caldera's Utopia series is similar to Hot Spring's Limelight series. (The Pulse is same footpring in size, without a lounge or "Captain's Chair)
Even though the Geneva looks similiar to the Envoy- they are still quite different in the design, jetting, filtration, controls...etc.

I most definitely agree that soaking these two could make a big difference in your decision.
Good Luck!

So, do you think the Envoy is a better quality tub?  The dealer at Hot Springs told me the Hot Springs is a Bentley and a Caldera is a Yugo.  He said it's not comparing apples to apples.  I like the cabinet on the Caldera much better than the Envoy.  Is the filtration better on the Envoy?

Dealers say stuff like this all the time. They get paid to sell their brand not the competition. It's called salesmanship and should be left out of your decision making process on these two brands. I would say they are both about the same in quality, longevity and energy efficiency. Go with the brand that feels best on your butt.
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BullFrogSpasMN

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #12 on: July 09, 2017, 10:17:39 am »
Yay, congrats on the hot tub shopping!

Caldera's Utopia series is similar to Hot Spring's Limelight series. (The Pulse is same footpring in size, without a lounge or "Captain's Chair)
Even though the Geneva looks similiar to the Envoy- they are still quite different in the design, jetting, filtration, controls...etc.

I most definitely agree that soaking these two could make a big difference in your decision.
Good Luck!

So, do you think the Envoy is a better quality tub?  The dealer at Hot Springs told me the Hot Springs is a Bentley and a Caldera is a Yugo.  He said it's not comparing apples to apples.  I like the cabinet on the Caldera much better than the Envoy.  Is the filtration better on the Envoy?

That's actually a pretty cringe-worthy statement especially when considering the 2 brands mentioned...Watkins Manf. builds both tubs, they both retail for 11-13k, but yet one is a Yugo and one is a Bentley? So basically everyone buying a Caldera over 10k is a getting an unreliable overpriced junker? is that what he's saying? Makes no sense at all, pure rubbish

bud16415

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Re: Hot Springs Envoy or Caldera Geneva
« Reply #13 on: July 09, 2017, 10:35:50 am »

Almost 30 years ago I remember my x mother n law who owned a spa company using bleach in the hot tub.  I don't recall too much other than the bleach poured straight from the bottle.  I was wondering if the Frog cartridges were more of a gimmick that would require more money.  An Artesian dealer told me he quit ordering his floor models with the Frog system because customers were complaining of either too much chemical being released or not enough and that the cost is too expensive.  I don't know yet the Geneva or the Envoy.  I have to talk to both dealers again this week.  I have really been leaning towards the Geneva.  May I ask what you have yours placed on and do you live in a cold climate?  The warranty says it must be on a concrete slab or a deck.  One Caldera dealer told us gravel and another told us Slab or deck.  We plan on doing a slab.  I can't wait to get it.  Thank you for the information.  The fact that you would purchase the same model same brand again says a lot!

My Geneva sits on top of a 30” high wood construction deck I built. The tub weighs about 6000 pounds full of water and then add in the weight of people etc and you need a sturdy deck.

It is very cold where we live we get temps as low as –30f every winter and weeks at a time subzero. There were a couple things about the Geneva that I found appealed to me in this climate. First was the packed insulation material they call fiber-cor. It has amazingly good insulation factor and it can be easily removed and replaced if repairs are ever needed. In the case of a leak water travels straight down thru it and it is easier to pinpoint the leak. The second cold weather feature the Geneva has is the split GFCI breaker panel. I have 240v power off a 50a breaker in the house feeding the spa panel. Inside the panel there are 2 GFCI breakers a 20a and a 30a and then 7 wires running to the tub. The power to the heaters and to the pumps are two separate feeds. The tub is programmed so that if the heater goes in the winter the tub alerts you of that and goes into a survival mode. What it does is slowly circulate the hot water in the tub to keep pipes from freezing in the more exposed areas of the equipment area. In the winter with 103 104f water in the tub and zero ambient temps outside this gives the tub days of protection longer than without this feature to get a service man out to replace the heater.

Most of the sanitizing made simple devices I think are made to sell you overpriced products. Just like K-cup coffee. I personally think the salt generators are the way to go. But the ones offered as a in tub package are more of the same. I have a friend with an after market salt chlorine generator and it really works nice. I have more than once thought about getting one. I don’t feel they would damage a tub but the warranty might see it different is the only reason I haven’t.

Most of the products sold for spas have a inexpensive counterpart. Clorox type bleach is just one of them.     


bud16415

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #14 on: July 09, 2017, 10:39:30 am »
Yay, congrats on the hot tub shopping!

Caldera's Utopia series is similar to Hot Spring's Limelight series. (The Pulse is same footpring in size, without a lounge or "Captain's Chair)
Even though the Geneva looks similiar to the Envoy- they are still quite different in the design, jetting, filtration, controls...etc.

I most definitely agree that soaking these two could make a big difference in your decision.
Good Luck!

So, do you think the Envoy is a better quality tub?  The dealer at Hot Springs told me the Hot Springs is a Bentley and a Caldera is a Yugo.  He said it's not comparing apples to apples.  I like the cabinet on the Caldera much better than the Envoy.  Is the filtration better on the Envoy?

That's actually a pretty cringe-worthy statement especially when considering the 2 brands mentioned...Watkins Manf. builds both tubs, they both retail for 11-13k, but yet one is a Yugo and one is a Bentley? So basically everyone buying a Caldera over 10k is a getting an unreliable overpriced junker? is that what he's saying? Makes no sense at all, pure rubbish

Agree :) and would actually give me a reason to not deal with that dealer. If it was a sales person I would have a talk with the owner. if it was the owner I would have a talk with Watkins.

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Re: Bullfrog A7L, Caldera Geneva, Hot Springs High Life Envoy?
« Reply #14 on: July 09, 2017, 10:39:30 am »

 

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