|
Energy Efficiency
At Aquatech Pools we are
focusing our efforts on informing owners about
Energy Efficient Swimming Pool operation.
It's the green thing to do.
Swimming pools lose energy in a variety of ways.
The Department of
Energy has found that water evaporation is overwhelmingly the single
largest source of energy over consumption, accounting for 70% of total energy
lost in both outdoor and indoor pools.
It takes 1 Btu
(British thermal unit) to raise 1 pound of water 1 degree, but each pound of
80ºF water that evaporates takes a whopping 1,048 Btu of heat out of the pool.
Lowering your
pool operating costs:
Keeping the heat in:
-
Covering
your pool when not in use to prevent heat loss can be the single most
effective means in reducing evaporation. An automatic pool cover or a
solar sun ring cover is the most
efficient method of reducing evaporation.
-
In windy areas, you can add a windbreak—trees, shrubs, or a
fence—to reduce evaporation. The windbreak needs to be high enough and close
enough to the pool that it does not create turbulence over the pool, which
will increase evaporation. You also don't want the windbreak to shade the
pool from the sun, which helps heat it.
A mere 7mph wind on the pool surface can
increase energy consumption by 300%. The evaporation rate from an
outdoor pool varies depending on the pool's temperature, air temperature and
humidity, and the wind speed at the pool surface. The higher the pool
temperature and wind speed and the lower the humidity, the greater the
evaporation rate.
High efficiency heating:
-
If you are building a new pool, locate return lines
in the floor of the pool. This is the most efficient place to bring
heated water into the pool. Floor returns or a
Paramount
in-floor cleaning systems can be used to accomplish this.
-
For existing pools point return inlets
downward. This will reduce water surface movement and evaporation.
-
Set the pool equipment valves so water being
heated is being drawn from the top of the pool and
returned to the lowest point.
-
Maintain efficient daily operations.
Program your pool equipment to draw solar heated surface water through the
surface skimmer and return to the bottom of the pool through a
high flow pool cleaner or return inlets. Pool equipment operation hours should be while the
pool cover or solar cover are in full sun. This process alone could
reduce cost of heating by 95%.
-
Backwash the pool filter only as much as
necessary to avoid wasting water and energy.
- High-efficiency electric
heat pumps.
A heat pump simply
moves heat from the air and transfers it to the pool.
- Properly sized pumps
and motors can all save utility costs.
- Solar energy is abundantly available and environmentally friendly.
Solar-powered heating systems can raise pool water temperatures 10°F to 20°F
For more
information please also view the Department of Energy's website regarding
energy efficiency and renewable energy.
|