Hey there, ❤️❤️❤️❤️ If you find our video helpful, we would 𝓰𝓻𝓮𝓪𝓽𝓵𝔂 𝓪𝓹𝓹𝓻𝓮𝓬𝓲𝓪𝓽𝓮 it if you could support us by subscribing. Your subscription will help us reach 𝓞𝓾𝓻 𝓰𝓸𝓪𝓵 𝓸𝓯 5𝟬𝟬𝟬 𝓼𝓾𝓫𝓼𝓬𝓻𝓲𝓫𝓮𝓻𝓼, and we sincerely thank you for your support. ❤️❤️❤️❤️
I wish it worked instantly like the Harry Potter wand, but, oh well, for the price we went with the slower spell it casts. Stay tuned till we get to wizard level silt removal. :P :)
Thank you for the video. I personally would not recommend a rechargeable pool vacuum, especially by Kokido, even if it's affordable. And this is based solely on replacement batteries (un)availability. I bought a Kokido Telsa 10 about 2 years ago, and it''s battery completely died after several dozens of operation cycles. And replacement batteries are NOWHERE to be found. I tried to find suitable batteries by size, voltage and capacity, but it appears even the connector Kokido use is some kind of proprietary, not a regular Molex or JST or ANYTHING I recognized. Also, these devices require recharging every 2-3 months, otherwise the batteries self-discharge, and this decreases their miserable usable life even more. This is an issue if you put the pool stuff to storage for the winter. So once you reached the battery end of life, you need a whole new pool vacuum.
Thanks for your valuable insight. This will give other viewers good info regarding the battery replacement. For our purposes, we had to get something to get the silt out so we just purchased this. For the next upgrade we will take that in to consideration for sure!! Thanks for watching and taking time to comment.
Actually, after using this model for about a year now or more I have had no issues with the rechargeable battery at all. It' holds up well and does the job as long as you are patient with it as it is slow. You need a sock or something in the filter to hold onto the particulate matter. It works great for the price and has enabled me to use the same chlorinated water. Without the vacuum, I couldn't have! I love this thing. The run time is about 45 minutes of suction. If you can afford it you might get a spare so you can vacuum totally; otherwise you'll have do half the pool after a lot of debris from rainstorms and wait till the vacuum dries out and recharges.
Sometimes I find pulling slowly backwards picks up more silt than forward but that may have to do with my height and the way I hold it than the rechargeable vacuum.
May be we should create another video of how we took out the green algae. It works but it takes time. If you can watch our socks hack video you can do it that way. Get few socks and chlorine tablets. It will take you few days but it worked for us. Have to keep vacuuming and recharging the vacuum as it’s a small vacuum.
Hi Mark, You have encouraged me to put this in the description, too. If you have a small pool or spa and just want to maintain it, I would recommend it. But, if your pool is larger and collects more leaves and dirt I would say it still does the job but it is really slowwww. The filter bag is very small so lots of leaves will totally clog it. We had only silt and tiny leaves. We cover ours with the solar cover to keep out debris. Also having to keep cleaning the filter and adjusting the nozzle can be annoying if there are lots of leaves. After 30-40 min you will have to let it dry completely and charge it. If you need it for this price point try it and keep your receipt if you are in the USA. Personally, I would rather have an automatic one but for the price point we kept this one for now. We did not want the vacuum to cost more than the pool. :P Thanks for watching our video.
Hey there,
❤️❤️❤️❤️
If you find our video helpful, we would 𝓰𝓻𝓮𝓪𝓽𝓵𝔂 𝓪𝓹𝓹𝓻𝓮𝓬𝓲𝓪𝓽𝓮 it if you could support us by subscribing. Your subscription will help us reach 𝓞𝓾𝓻 𝓰𝓸𝓪𝓵 𝓸𝓯 5𝟬𝟬𝟬 𝓼𝓾𝓫𝓼𝓬𝓻𝓲𝓫𝓮𝓻𝓼, and we sincerely thank you for your support.
❤️❤️❤️❤️
Thank you.
Letting us know there's no sound but working helps me.
Thanks for watching!! 🙏
Great video. I’m going to buy one today. Thank you so much. 😀
Thanks for watching our video. Glad you liked it. So far the vacuum is still doing a good job. :)
Pool magic-wand.
I wish it worked instantly like the Harry Potter wand, but, oh well, for the price we went with the slower spell it casts. Stay tuned till we get to wizard level silt removal. :P :)
thank you
Thanks for watching. 😊
Thank you for the video. I personally would not recommend a rechargeable pool vacuum, especially by Kokido, even if it's affordable. And this is based solely on replacement batteries (un)availability. I bought a Kokido Telsa 10 about 2 years ago, and it''s battery completely died after several dozens of operation cycles. And replacement batteries are NOWHERE to be found. I tried to find suitable batteries by size, voltage and capacity, but it appears even the connector Kokido use is some kind of proprietary, not a regular Molex or JST or ANYTHING I recognized. Also, these devices require recharging every 2-3 months, otherwise the batteries self-discharge, and this decreases their miserable usable life even more. This is an issue if you put the pool stuff to storage for the winter. So once you reached the battery end of life, you need a whole new pool vacuum.
Thanks for your valuable insight. This will give other viewers good info regarding the battery replacement. For our purposes, we had to get something to get the silt out so we just purchased this. For the next upgrade we will take that in to consideration for sure!! Thanks for watching and taking time to comment.
Actually, after using this model for about a year now or more I have had no issues with the rechargeable battery at all. It' holds up well and does the job as long as you are patient with it as it is slow. You need a sock or something in the filter to hold onto the particulate matter. It works great for the price and has enabled me to use the same chlorinated water. Without the vacuum, I couldn't have! I love this thing. The run time is about 45 minutes of suction. If you can afford it you might get a spare so you can vacuum totally; otherwise you'll have do half the pool after a lot of debris from rainstorms and wait till the vacuum dries out and recharges.
Sometimes I find pulling slowly backwards picks up more silt than forward but that may have to do with my height and the way I hold it than the rechargeable vacuum.
Does it work well on green algae?
May be we should create another video of how we took out the green algae. It works but it takes time. If you can watch our socks hack video you can do it that way. Get few socks and chlorine tablets. It will take you few days but it worked for us. Have to keep vacuuming and recharging the vacuum as it’s a small vacuum.
Wow
Thanks for watching!!
Would u recommend it?
Hi Mark,
You have encouraged me to put this in the description, too.
If you have a small pool or spa and just want to maintain it, I would recommend it. But, if your pool is larger and collects more leaves and dirt I would say it still does the job but it is really slowwww. The filter bag is very small so lots of leaves will totally clog it. We had only silt and tiny leaves. We cover ours with the solar cover to keep out debris. Also having to keep cleaning the filter and adjusting the nozzle can be annoying if there are lots of leaves. After 30-40 min you will have to let it dry completely and charge it. If you need it for this price point try it and keep your receipt if you are in the USA. Personally, I would rather have an automatic one but for the price point we kept this one for now. We did not want the vacuum to cost more than the pool. :P
Thanks for watching our video.
I would recommend it if you put a sock in the filter chamber to grab onto the tiny particles!