Article Marketing Logo
Some ideas to consume less energy in your spa - Article Marketing To Go

Article Marketing To Go

Welcome Guest

Search:

Article Marketing To Go » Home-general » Some ideas to consume less energy in your spa

Some ideas to consume less energy in your spa

View PDF | Print View
by: amabaie
Total views: 12
Word Count: 613
Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2010 Time: 7:56 PM

It's good for the environment. It's good for your pocket book. It's just common sense. Save energy as best you can with your hot tub or spa. Hot tubs are among the bigger consumers of electricity in your home, because they keep the water at a high temperature - and that takes energy, even in August. Fortunately, there are several ways to save energy and reduce both your environmental footprint and the strain on your budget at the same time.

1) Keep your hot tub covered when not in use. This is the same principal as keep your door closed in winter to keep the heat in, or in summer to keep the air conditioning in. Remember when your mother used to admonish you to "Keep the door closed. Are you trying to heat the whole neighbourhood?" Well, the same goes for your hot tub - keep the spa covered, or you'll heat the whole neighbourhood.

2) You don't need heat while you're not there...so turn off the heat. Or at least turn it down. That goes for vacations, long weekends, weeks when you know your schedule will be too busy to use the spa - any time when there will be more than two or three days in a row when you know you won't need your hot tub...turn off the heat. (NOTE: In winter weather, keep some heat going so that pipes don't freeze and equipment is not damaged. But you can still turn it way down while you are away for a week or more.

3) You might want also to buy a floating thermal blanket. Very cheap. Very light-weight. Very easy to put on your hot tub. You might consider buying a floating thermal blanket. They are lightweight. They are cheap They are easy to put on your hot tub. It will keep both heat and moisture in the tub and away from your cover. It saves energy and helps your hot tub last longer.

4) Let Mother Nature keep your energy use in check - with a little help from you, of course. A well-placed shrubbery or ornamental fence can also serve as a wind break. Wind blowing across the surface of your hot tub cools it down. A wind break keeps the wind from cooling the water, so you spend less energy heating it back up.

5) If you use your spa often at night, consider whether candles would add to the mood, rather than electric lights. Why? Because those lights add to your energy bill. Of course, candles do in another way, too...but in most cases not as much.

6) Keep your filters well-maintained and clean, and replace them as they show their age. Clogged filters slow down the circulation of water, straining the equipment, and making your motors work harder - and consuming more power. An overworked motor will also have a shorter life and need to be replaced sooner.

7) Keep your temperature at 102 degrees instead of the typical factory set 104 degrees. It might seem like a small difference, but there is actually quite a lot more energy that goes into each incremental degree of heat at this level than at lower temperatures.

We all love our hot tubs but we also know how much energy they require to keep warm. Keep the fun, let go of (some of) the energy. Make sure the hot tub you choose actually reduce energy rather than increasing it. These are some common-sense steps you can take to avoid digging too deep into your pockets and scarring too deeply the environment with your hot tub.

About the Author

The author is David Leonhardt, writing for. Come see all the manyhot tub shapes they fit.


Rating: Not yet rated

Comments

No comments posted.