Welcome to our forum.
Can any of you heat your tubs up to 104 and then unplug your heaters for however long the tub stays on the floor, and yes I do open the cover most of the day which results in temperature falling through out the day to around 98 degrees if the cover is off all day, then it is back to 104 by the next morning, so how can you argue that the pumps don't heat, or aid in heating water. The facts are facts.
I understand though, I would hate to have to live with the fear of facing a superiour product as well,
Also I will have to look into hydro-pool I am not familiar with that product, I am sure there will be alot of similar design to an Arctic coming out, or already out there.
. sorry for the lack of puctuation, hard to type with a baby in hand
Get your last digs in now I will probably lock this thread by the end of the day. Any individual issues can be discussed in new threads. While quick to defend the original poster and wanting to welcome an expert on a spa brand I know nothing about, it seems that the only purpose of this thread is to be adversarial. It may even have become a hit and run thing. As moderator, I welcome info and news about lots of brands I have never owned and I'm sure soon to be owners will appreciate reading these threads and taking them on face value. However, this one seems to be going no where.
Well, as a final post from me on this, let me say this:The 'controversy' over FF vs. TP is overblown. Take a close look - the biggest players have moved away from TP and toward FF. .
I do not see where anyone really beat up anyone here...nor was anyone taking personal shots at anyone...more than anything real questions were asked that we not addressed but plenty of bold statements were made....
My biggest issue with the way that Arctic insulates is that they spray all of they foam on the inside wall of the cabinet. By not filling the void they allow the weight of the foam to pull against the cabinet and then encourage more weight from water by adding several places on the cabinet to bring in moisture(i.e. rails top/bottom and door panels that bolt against rather than fit in the cabinet wall). In addition, by doing it this way they don’t provide any sound deadening nor support for the hoses and jets. They tout the fact that they are the only manufacture to use “Reflex Torsion hose” and are proud of that. I have news for you, with around 200 manufactures someone else would have picked it up if it was that good, it was available to all of us. The sheer nature of that type plumbing makes it harder to work with, glue and more in need of support, it’s bigger and heavier than standard PVC… Let’s look at the heating system; first off, most of their marketing and sales pitch states that they can heat the spa without a heating element yet they put an expensive proprietary element in anyway, is this just to add cost? Many, many manufactures have tried to coat the element with Teflon and titanium but the failure rate made them quit. An example of that type of coating would be a Teflon coated skillet that you replace every year, the coating will and does come off! Now, how about the “forever floor”? My first comment to that is I think it was absolutely unethical to sell it to the consumer the way they did when it came out. Did you get the “Ants in the cabinet pitch”? Over half of the dealers in the US were using that pitch which leads me to believe that it came from a factory level but regardless, if you understand the properties of fiberglass you would understand why putting a fiberglass base on the ground is a bad idea, have you ever heard of a substance called Cobalt? All in all Arctic might have their place however it’s my opinion that everything on their spa is much more marketing oriented then engineering oriented and their sales pitch borderlines unethical.