We have an 18ft -54"tall above ground pool and debating which type of heater to get. We have rigged a solar heating system (600ft of plastic tubing). It works well but our area, especially this season has been overcast and cool most of the time and as you guessed, not much heat going into the pool. We want it to be and maintain 80's. which do you think would work better for us. We typically won't see air temps in the 60's-70's until Maybe mid to late May and usually early October it starts turning cool again. Thank you.
Hi Blake, You mention more moving parts in a gas heater than a heat pump. I've been servicing heaters for more than 40 years now and I find the gas heaters have a pressure switch and an exhaust fan on the newer gas heaters. The heat pumps have a much bigger fan and still have a pressure switch. You didn't mention that most heat pumps require a 220v 40 amp circuit for electrical supply, the same as what a clothes dryer uses. Besides the fact that the heat pump won't run below 50 degrees F., you didn't mention that the heat pump is not at all efficient if the temperature is below 60 degrees F. One more thing I will add is that in Connecticut for example, the two months you need the heater the most are May and September. During those two months, the average temperature in CT is between 50 and 55 degrees rendering the heat pumps useless here. I recommend the fossil fuel heaters here and size them to raise the water temp. about 1 degree an hour. If the water temp. when you open the pool is 60 degrees, turn on the heater and you will have 84 degree water one day later even if the air temp is 55 degrees. Using a heat pump, you would be hard pressed to find the water any warmer at all. In the chart above, you compared a 30,000 gal. pool with a gas heater to a 6,000 gal. pool with the heat pump. Very misleading!If you live in the southern states, I may lean more toward the heat pump.Rick Tanguay, Pres. Tanguay Pools, Inc.
Very informative video. I am racking my brain trying to decide on a pool heater for my in-ground 16x38' . I have been scared away from the operating cost & unexpected problems of gas heaters. So a heat pump is starting to make more sense. I am in north Jersey and dont plan on swimming when outside temps are below 70 degrees. What make & model would you recommend? Thanks Blake
Same question here. I live in NJ as well. I was thinking of natural gas pool heater because of the quick temperature rise and being able to use anytime in the year. But after realizing how much it can cost... I'm not sure if I want to do that anymore. I'd probably just want a heat pump to extend the pool season and just close the pool during the winter.
Hi, I’m from NJ and exploring options to heat my inground pool, I’ve already have heater but need to install propane tank or can install heat pump? What did you end up using and can you please share your experience.
It is not clear to me for sizing calculation in case of heat pump. Specially depth of pool ? Beacuse heat required for total volume of water. Pls clear it.
Please explain how running electric is lower operating costs. Today and when the video was made, gas was dramatically cheaper than electricity. This is the key issue.
Because you get anywhere between 3 to 5 times the heat output in watts for what you put in in electrical power. So 1kw of electrical power will get you 3 to 5 kw of heat. This is because your using your 1kw of electricity to "extract" 3 to 5 kw of HEAT energy from the air. The ratio of "3 to 5 times" what you put in depends on my different factors: efficiency of the heat pump, outside temperatures etc. (Now, Apologies if it gets complicated ) to make an example:- . So in warmer weather where your getting 5 times the heat. lets say for illustration that gas is 5cents and electricity is 10cents per kw Hour (kwh) and it takes 10 hours to heat your pool. . Without a heat pump; heating your pool costs 50cents (5cents x 10 hours) for gas and $1 for electricity (10cents x 10 hours). If you have a heat pump the electricity consumption (FOR THE SAME AMOUNT OF HEAT IN THE POOL) is 1/5 = 20cents. Less than half the 50cents you would pay for the required amount pf gas. So that is how you save money even if the cost of gas is half the price compared to electricity. This is a rough explanation. Obviously to work out if you would make a saving in your own circumstances you would have to use your own exact energy costs and average temperatures.
I have a variable speed pool pump and an electric heat pump. Should I run the pump on low or high to heat the Jacuzzi faster? or does it even matter.. thanks in advance.
***** great question! (and sorry for massive delay in my response.. that is embarassing!). In short, it won't really matter. If it were a pool, I would suggest high speed. In a Spa, your water will be "turned over" quickly either way, which will help raise the temp.
How is the operation cost of a gas boiler more when gas is half the cost of electricity per BTU. Plus I will never understand how natural gas burning at your house is is less environmentally friendly then electricity being generated from coal unless your power is nuclear
We do! What model heater do you have? Here is a heat exchanger for a Hayward Heater: www.poolsupplyworld.com/Hayward-HAXHXA1253-Heat-Exchanger-Assembly-H250/HAXHXA1253.htm
@@Ringo23a you don’t have a clue on how heat pumps work, do you? Just google, resistive heat vs. heat pump and you can clearly see the benefits. Then google cost to operate, propane, natural gas, and heat pump pool heaters. If you want to talk about “the cheapest” way to heat a pool, it’s a solar cover in ideal conditions.
@@woohunter1 as a 313a refrigeration mechanic I can assure you I know everything about how a heat pump works. I don't understand where your electric resistive load comes from as there is no such thing in natural gas or heat pump.. If you would like me to break it down into a BTU calculation I can do that for you. I don't mind helping people that are clueless on what they're talking about.
@@Ringo23a when you said “this guy has no idea what he’s talking about, natural gas is the cheapest way to heat your pool” I figured (I’ll even admit, assume) you were comparing gas to resistive heat, you got me on that part, lol. However, a heat pump is more cost effective than gas, propane and especially resistive heat. Heat pump pool heaters are a no brainer for most because they pull warm air out of ambient air, which during pool season is usually a lot warmer outside than when you are trying to heat your house during the winter.
Since when does a gas-fired heater have more moving parts than a heat pump?
We have an 18ft -54"tall above ground pool and debating which type of heater to get. We have rigged a solar heating system (600ft of plastic tubing). It works well but our area, especially this season has been overcast and cool most of the time and as you guessed, not much heat going into the pool. We want it to be and maintain 80's. which do you think would work better for us. We typically won't see air temps in the 60's-70's until Maybe mid to late May and usually early October it starts turning cool again. Thank you.
why not use the same size pool in your comparison?
Hi Blake, You mention more moving parts in a gas heater than a heat pump. I've been servicing heaters for more than 40 years now and I find the gas heaters have a pressure switch and an exhaust fan on the newer gas heaters. The heat pumps have a much bigger fan and still have a pressure switch. You didn't mention that most heat pumps require a 220v 40 amp circuit for electrical supply, the same as what a clothes dryer uses. Besides the fact that the heat pump won't run below 50 degrees F., you didn't mention that the heat pump is not at all efficient if the temperature is below 60 degrees F. One more thing I will add is that in Connecticut for example, the two months you need the heater the most are May and September. During those two months, the average temperature in CT is between 50 and 55 degrees rendering the heat pumps useless here. I recommend the fossil fuel heaters here and size them to raise the water temp. about 1 degree an hour. If the water temp. when you open the pool is 60 degrees, turn on the heater and you will have 84 degree water one day later even if the air temp is 55 degrees. Using a heat pump, you would be hard pressed to find the water any warmer at all. In the chart above, you compared a 30,000 gal. pool with a gas heater to a 6,000 gal. pool with the heat pump. Very misleading!If you live in the southern states, I may lean more toward the heat pump.Rick Tanguay, Pres. Tanguay Pools, Inc.
What heat pump BTU would I need to heat a 11,000 gallon pool at ambient temps from 50-75 degrees?
Very informative video. I am racking my brain trying to decide on a pool heater for my in-ground 16x38' . I have been scared away from the operating cost & unexpected problems of gas heaters. So a heat pump is starting to make more sense. I am in north Jersey and dont plan on swimming when outside temps are below 70 degrees. What make & model would you recommend? Thanks Blake
Same question here. I live in NJ as well.
I was thinking of natural gas pool heater because of the quick temperature rise and being able to use anytime in the year. But after realizing how much it can cost... I'm not sure if I want to do that anymore.
I'd probably just want a heat pump to extend the pool season and just close the pool during the winter.
Hi, I’m from NJ and exploring options to heat my inground pool, I’ve already have heater but need to install propane tank or can install heat pump? What did you end up using and can you please share your experience.
It is not clear to me for sizing calculation in case of heat pump. Specially depth of pool ? Beacuse heat required for total volume of water. Pls clear it.
Please explain how running electric is lower operating costs. Today and when the video was made, gas was dramatically cheaper than electricity. This is the key issue.
Because you get anywhere between 3 to 5 times the heat output in watts for what you put in in electrical power. So 1kw of electrical power will get you 3 to 5 kw of heat. This is because your using your 1kw of electricity to "extract" 3 to 5 kw of HEAT energy from the air. The ratio of "3 to 5 times" what you put in depends on my different factors: efficiency of the heat pump, outside temperatures etc.
(Now, Apologies if it gets complicated ) to make an example:- . So in warmer weather where your getting 5 times the heat. lets say for illustration that gas is 5cents and electricity is 10cents per kw Hour (kwh) and it takes 10 hours to heat your pool. . Without a heat pump; heating your pool costs 50cents (5cents x 10 hours) for gas and $1 for electricity (10cents x 10 hours). If you have a heat pump the electricity consumption (FOR THE SAME AMOUNT OF HEAT IN THE POOL) is 1/5 = 20cents. Less than half the 50cents you would pay for the required amount pf gas. So that is how you save money even if the cost of gas is half the price compared to electricity.
This is a rough explanation. Obviously to work out if you would make a saving in your own circumstances you would have to use your own exact energy costs and average temperatures.
York -SWIMMING POOL HEAT CHILL PUMP Unit Model 00500900. How to perform PM on it
I have a variable speed pool pump and an electric heat pump. Should I run the pump on low or high to heat the Jacuzzi faster? or does it even matter.. thanks in advance.
***** great question! (and sorry for massive delay in my response.. that is embarassing!). In short, it won't really matter. If it were a pool, I would suggest high speed. In a Spa, your water will be "turned over" quickly either way, which will help raise the temp.
Very helpful video, thank you!
What is your opinion of ecosteath pool heat pumps?
Juan In A Million I actually have not gotten the pleasure to test them. I will have to check them out! -Blake
why is a heat pump environmentally friendly?
Good tips and comparison....
How is the operation cost of a gas boiler more when gas is half the cost of electricity per BTU. Plus I will never understand how natural gas burning at your house is is less environmentally friendly then electricity being generated from coal unless your power is nuclear
Look up resistive heat vs. heat pump, they are both using only electric, but one is much more efficient.
Heat Pump ? How hot can the heat pump raise the temp up ?
Cant get parts for a 5 year old tank
Do you carry heat exchanger?
We do! What model heater do you have? Here is a heat exchanger for a Hayward Heater: www.poolsupplyworld.com/Hayward-HAXHXA1253-Heat-Exchanger-Assembly-H250/HAXHXA1253.htm
One month of heating with gas and you will be throwing that in the garbage.
Well that was a waste of time 🤪🤪🤪
This guy has no idea what he's talking about. Natural gas is by far the cheapest way to heat your pool!!!
Heat pumps are not resistive heaters.
@@woohunter1 neither is natural gas
@@Ringo23a you don’t have a clue on how heat pumps work, do you? Just google, resistive heat vs. heat pump and you can clearly see the benefits. Then google cost to operate, propane, natural gas, and heat pump pool heaters. If you want to talk about “the cheapest” way to heat a pool, it’s a solar cover in ideal conditions.
@@woohunter1 as a 313a refrigeration mechanic I can assure you I know everything about how a heat pump works. I don't understand where your electric resistive load comes from as there is no such thing in natural gas or heat pump.. If you would like me to break it down into a BTU calculation I can do that for you. I don't mind helping people that are clueless on what they're talking about.
@@Ringo23a when you said “this guy has no idea what he’s talking about, natural gas is the cheapest way to heat your pool” I figured (I’ll even admit, assume) you were comparing gas to resistive heat, you got me on that part, lol. However, a heat pump is more cost effective than gas, propane and especially resistive heat. Heat pump pool heaters are a no brainer for most because they pull warm air out of ambient air, which during pool season is usually a lot warmer outside than when you are trying to heat your house during the winter.