Welcome to our forum.
Our product makes sense. Recovering the waste heat from the motors makes sense. Having access to repair the spa in the event of a problem makes sense. Having a floor on your spa makes sense. Having a cover that can handle a heavy snow load, insulates better and doesn't absorb water as easy makes sense. Making your spa shell thicker and stronger so that it will last longer makes sense. Building a cabinet with sturdy materials, like Cedar and extruded Aluminum, so they last longer makes sense.
Tell me also about the heat loss during the 16 hours (most) a day the tub is not producing motor heat?Get your facts straight before you read us a pitch taught to you during a sales conference!!!!!
Oh and BTW, on the Arctic website they make the statement “inspired by one of the most successfully adapted cold-weather animals in the world, the great white Polar Bear”, I have news for you, God made the Polar Bear with full insulation and no “dead air space” (or should that be “dead bear space”). Maybe he should have consulted some of the single moms (another Arctic pitch) working at Arctic before creating them.
The pitch that irks me the most with Arctic is that they claim their hot tubs do not need a heater. How stupid do they think we are?Regards Zz
So which keirstead do we have the pleasure of debating with here, James or John?I’m sorry if I sound snide but I really don’t like Arctic’s consumer confusing pitch.
Yeh I agree... comments like "Our method of insulating a spa is more efficient" makes a joke out of industry doesn't it? :-/BTW JPKeirstead, that was your quote! Can you say BRAINWASHED boys and girls? Steve
Well, I have news for you too, God did make the Polar Bear with dead air space. "The white fur of the polar bear provides excellent insulation from the cold, even when they are swimming in the Arctic Ocean. The outer guard hairs form a layer that protects the inner fur from getting wet when the polar bear is in the ocean. These guard hairs are hollow and filled with air. Thus, they always have a layer of trapped air surrounding their bodies. After a swim they need only give a quick shake and they are nearly dry. There is also a thick layer of blubber that helps insulate the polar bear from the cold." taken from www.biosbcc.net"Hollow and filled with air" doesn't exactly sound like full insulation to me.