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Hot Tub
Construction: Insulation
copyright 2003 through 2019 Havenmade Full Foam Spas VS More Modern Thermally Sealed:This subject runs throughout our
entire
web site, because it
is the most important design concept a consumer
should consider. The best
insulation is the thermally closed
design, which is opposite to what is considered "good”
by
the
old time spa sales people. There is no evidence that full foam has
any superior
insulation to what has been proven in the side by
side independent
testing. And in independent studies done in
the EU, we are about 30% more efficient in winter
than the closest competitor with what they think is
a high energy efficient design. The
facts
are
in, and all of the
independent testing shows the thermally closed is
better.
With the Haven, Dynamic, Automatic, Insulation,
Technology DAIT insulation
system we have
taken the Thermally
Closed to the next level. The Thermal Closed or Thermally
Sealed and
particularly DAIT equipped spas are far superior
to the out of date full foam. DAIT is only
available as standard on
the Haven Spas, and in Europe on our Silver Spas
models. You can buy a DAIT
system for any model we offered and retrofit it or you
can buy it for your spa if it is
a thermal pane type of insulation and can be retrofit
with the DAIT. Full foam (and other silly design
concepts) is still here
because of consumer's lack of understanding on the
subject of hot tubs
and spas. You
would have to know
almost
nothing about natural
science to purchase a full foam spa after
reading any of the articles on insulation contained
in this site. If you don't
understand science, then find a friend who does
and ask them to evaluate these articles. "This information on spa design has been "out there" for nearly 24 years. If you didn't do the research, what else is there to say?" The only way these
other spas
could be sold is because the consumer takes a look
at the surface of
the spa and goes no farther. The sales persons
"stays on the
surface" and sells the spa, using the consumer's
ignorance (on the
subject of hot tubs).
Apparently there are a lot of naive spa shoppers and
scientifically
ignorant spa sales people. (And some
sleazy people in the spa business.)I am
sorry if that offends those who have already made
the mistake of
purchasing a full foam spa or those who sell them.
This information on
spa deign has been "out
there" for nearly 24 years. If you didn't do
the research, what
else is there to say? When people read my
book and
go shopping, these sales
people are "set way back", because they have no
factual answers to give
to the
consumer about the design of their
products. I had
one of my customers thrown out of the store for
asking detailed
questions about that salesman's product. The
salesman could not
answer. He called in to a local radio consumer
advocate program
and I almost had to lay down from laughing
(FOFLMAO). The sales man figured the
customer was a shill from another hot tub store,
because consumers are
not supposed to know anything about hot tubs. The original concept of full foam, was a cheap way to build hot tubs with a single sheet of flexible cheap plastic shell, (called Rovel or Centrex) stuffed with dense foam to keep it from falling down with water in it. (Did I tell you just how cheap this is?) It was developed in There have been in the past three independent and separate tests performed comparing the out of date and archaic full foam spas to the, modern and much better, thermally closed. In all cases the thermally closed has been favored for better insulation. Each year, we offered the “Spa Challenge” to all the spa companies. We even had the invitation sent out to all manufacturers to participate by an independent company, but absolutely no responses at all. (Golly gee, I wonder why? ) http://www.spaspecialist.com/SPA_CHALLENGE.html The first independent test in 1994
that
evaluated the rise
in temperature the spa water received from two jet
pumps in a real*
Coleman Spa that was
tested. There was a
temperature rise of 14 degrees, on
high speed, just from the pumps over an 8 hour period.
These were 1.5
HP pumps
by the way; very small horsepower by today's
standards. On low speed,
with just
the filter pump, the rise was 4 degrees over 8 hours.
I believe this
was conducted at 68 degrees ambient. 68 is
considered the average
temperature, year round. In 1996 another test was performed
by the
Universities of
Arizona and "a fully insulated spa {full foam} makes no attempt to recover and use waste heat." (Tong and Rogers 1996). "...the performance of an insulating system which makes use of a thermal barrier {Thermally Sealed}, generated by waste heat rejected from the motors and pumps, in an enclosed air cavity around the tub is superior to a system which simply insulates the tub directly."
This is because air is 3501 times less expensive to
heat than water.
And if you are heating the air to form an air barrier
to stop the super
high watt density or BTU's per cubic foot of water,
you will
automatically save energy, even if you only have 3/8
of an inch of wood
and no thermal foil and no foam insulation at
all. It must be
sealed as air tight as you can. The value of
insulation is
measured by the total heat loss from the vessel. In a recent test done in Alberta
Canada, the
Thermally
Closed Arctic spa came in very high compared to some
popular spas. http://www.spaspecialist.com/AlbertaResearchCouncil.html
To summarize the differences between the so called “full foam” and the much more modern “thermally sealed”:
So, a well designed, modern
thermally
efficient hot tub uses
the energy of the equipment much more fully and it is
less costly to
own, in
electric use, chemicals because it filters better, and
in maintenance
or repairs be cause of ease of access.
There
is
better
use of the total energy of
the spa, better water flow from the jet pumps, and
cleaner water by
proper
filtering and has full therapy with three types of
therapy. Water jets,
Air jets and Turbo Air.. The
motors last
longer
because of much better cooling. And of course an
ethical company
would only use metal
control enclosures
for fire protection. Why would you buy a structural full
foam spa? Anyone who
purchases a structural foam,
full foam spa is not
educated on spas. Anyone who "misses the boat"
with Haven Spas is
just not understanding the whole picture. Our
customers are
always calling me and thanking me for this treasure in
their life,
called
a Haven Spa. *The Real Coleman Spas, that I am
very
familiar with, are no longer in
existence they have been sold
to a company called MAAX and they do not
resemble the original
engineered product. The original engineered product had
much
stronger 2x4 wooden frames, air injection, the shells
were made from
Acrylic with Vinyl Ester resin and hand rolled
fiberglass. (Does
this sound familiar?) http://www.spaspecialist.com/haven_spas_in_general.html HOME |
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