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Steve....I am confused I thought the Artic spas were used as a heat source for small towns in the case of a power failure....did you not also read that in their brochure along with it using the space shuttle heat shield to recover heat as reenters earths atmosphere that will help it remain hot with the cover off...or was it that their cover is used as the heat shield its self....
With the insulation methods used in spas today you needn't worry. Most spas will be fine for 7 days in the event of a power failure during the winter. But in the event of a prolonged power outage (greater then 7 days) following the advice stuart gave will help prevent any potential damage.Jason,Store manager for a D-1 & Caldera Dealer
As an example, I was having to turn my spa off at night for a few days. The weather was in the 40s. At 11pm at would be 102. At 7am is was 99 when I turned the power back on.
I was just telling my husband how well our spa is insulated after I did my last fill. I first did a superchlorination which required me to run my spa for over 2 hours with the cover off. The first thing I did was turn the temp down to 80 so the heater wouldn't run. The spa started at 101 degrees. The outside temp was 36. Remember no cover with jets running full power. At the end of the 2.5 hrs the spa temp was 98. That's insulation.Elle
lol..no that's a Marquis.....
Hi EveryoneWhy would you need the light in the motor compartment? Wouldn't it stay warm from the tub?I have a HS Vanguard. Does the Circ. pump keep the motor compartment warm during winter and when the power goes out the motor compartment lose it heat source?
I don't know a whole lot about thermodynamics, but is it true that the heat loss from the water would slow down as the water cooled? Seems to me that heat transfer rate is higher when the temperature differential is greater, at least I think that's what they tried to learn us in school. But I was in school a long time ago, so just wondering.Brewman
We have serviced tubs that have had no power for 46 hours at -14C ??F here in the great white north, Ontario.Water temp was 102F (per customer) when the spa quit, the water was 80F when the tech got it back up and running. That's about 2 day's. I don't think another day would have caused it to freeze.
Wouldn’t that confuse the heater if the topside is reading in Fahrenheit and the outside temp is being measured in Celsius?