Hello TFP Forums,
Would love some help in figuring out the most efficient path forward... as I do not think this system is built as efficiently as it needs to be right now, since it is costing me $250-300 per month in electricity (in southern Canada, so warm summers, medium cold winters).
I have an in-ground spa/hot tub that is about 50-60' away from the equipment pad that is causing me headaches with an insane electric bill for the last 3 years or so - details below on my existing equipment pad (Pool and Spa, totally separate systems at the moment... but the equipment share the same concrete pad, so plumbing can be modified if necessary to share certain components if viable).
1) The Spa - In-Ground, surrounded in coping stone, but no spillover, totally separate system from the pool today
Dimensions: Top dimensions of 8ft2” x 6ft2” x 3’2” deep in middle (calculated as 3151 litres due to the bench all the way around, so call it 3000 litres)
Spa Pack/Heater: Gecko IN.XE-5-11-H5.5... Options: 1-2-k-k-D-60k-V2-GD1
Pump 1 (2-Stage): Century B2979 Serial: 32018J2, Type: CXCP, Frame: Y56J, HP 2.40 total): 2.0 / 0.25, SF 1.20, PH 1, RPM 3450 / 1725, Volts: 230V, Amps: 10.0 / 2.1
Pump 2 (1-Stage): Century Part 7-184949-22, Serial: 08819J2, 230V, Type: CX, 8.0/16.0 Amps, 3450 RPM, P56J Frame
Blower (Pump 3, Connected to Spa Pack)
Filter: Single Cartridge, Simple Filter (plumbed on Pump 1)
Jets: 20 total jets, split out to 2 main jet lines to the pad, split at the tub (1 main line for each pump), 50-60' lines to pad
Suction: 2 main suction lines to pad, 1 bottom suction to Pump2, 2 top suction to Pump1, 50-60' lines to pad
2) The Pool - In-Ground, surrounded by coping stone
Dimensions: 32' x 16' + steps with diving rock waterfall
Pump: Pentair IntelliFlo Variable Pump
Heater: Pentair MasterTemp 250
Filter: 4 Cartridge Pentair Filter
SWG: Pentair IC20
Control: IntelliCenter
The issue I believe here is the lines are 50-60ft in length, traveling underground from the pad to the tub, so the water is constantly losing heat from there, as well as the cover/usual places at the tub.
The cost is significant in the winter, but also the summer... so I think there was just poor planning of the contractor who did the backyard overhaul 3 years ago, inefficient design, pumps and spa pack used (at the time I did not know much about pool equipment, I had only used pre-fab hot tubs with sanitation/heating/pumping systems built in).
Trying to figure out if there is a way I can plumb the systems with manual/automated valves to leverage (at least a portion) of my existing equipment investment sometimes.
The initial goal would be to keep the spa at low temps always, circulating as minimally as possible (night time), then heating it up quickly when we use the spa (only every couple of weeks, or for parties).
The problem is right now I can't do that due to the Gecko IN.XE taking so long to heat the Spa temperature - even if I keep the Spa at 95F, if we want to get to 102F or so, it takes 5+ hours to do so.
My potential solution options (in order from least to most cost and intrusiveness):
1) Valve Retrofit - Retrofit some valves (manual or automatic) to leverage the MasterTemp 250 Pool Heater when I want to, so that I can keep the Spa at a much lower temp, and swap to gas heat when we periodically want to use it.
The goal would be being able to get it up to temp in a very short period of time. I can optionally (in non-winter months), likely turn off the IN.XE Gecko 5.5kW heater altogether and just use the pumps to circulate overnight, turning to the the Gas heater to heat when I need.
2) #1 Plus a Dedicated Circ Pump - add a dedicated circulation pump to replace Pump 1... as I believe circulation is also costing some $$$, especially during the winter when freeze protection kicks on every 20-30 mins and kicks both pumps and the blower on full blast. So a simple circ pump that can hit 25GPM minimum of a MasterTemp 250 if required.
3) #2 Plus Dedicated Small Gas Heater to replace Gecko IN.XE heater altogether - add a dedicated smaller MasterTemp 125 or other Gas Heater to the mix to fully replace the electric heater altogether, even for maintaining at the lower temp.
4) #3 Plus Dedicated Small IC15 Chlorinator to no longer have to use a floating Chorine puck dispenser, which is very inconsistent and annoying to keep up with in the winter.
5) Just swap everything for the Spa over to Pentair Intellicenter, use another Pentair Variable Pump, MasterTemp 125 Heater, IC15 Chlorinator and sell/forget the Spa Pack and existing pumps.
Any guidance you can provide would be appreciated... this of course could be a gradual progression - I'm just trying to figure out the most efficient path forward, whilst doing proper planning for the winter months... as I am sure some of the equipment is not meant to run in the colder months, etc.
Thanks in advance - apologies for the length of the post... trying to provide as much detail as possible.
Best Regards,
dg6464
edit: adding pictures as requested




Would love some help in figuring out the most efficient path forward... as I do not think this system is built as efficiently as it needs to be right now, since it is costing me $250-300 per month in electricity (in southern Canada, so warm summers, medium cold winters).
I have an in-ground spa/hot tub that is about 50-60' away from the equipment pad that is causing me headaches with an insane electric bill for the last 3 years or so - details below on my existing equipment pad (Pool and Spa, totally separate systems at the moment... but the equipment share the same concrete pad, so plumbing can be modified if necessary to share certain components if viable).
1) The Spa - In-Ground, surrounded in coping stone, but no spillover, totally separate system from the pool today
Dimensions: Top dimensions of 8ft2” x 6ft2” x 3’2” deep in middle (calculated as 3151 litres due to the bench all the way around, so call it 3000 litres)
Spa Pack/Heater: Gecko IN.XE-5-11-H5.5... Options: 1-2-k-k-D-60k-V2-GD1
Pump 1 (2-Stage): Century B2979 Serial: 32018J2, Type: CXCP, Frame: Y56J, HP 2.40 total): 2.0 / 0.25, SF 1.20, PH 1, RPM 3450 / 1725, Volts: 230V, Amps: 10.0 / 2.1
Pump 2 (1-Stage): Century Part 7-184949-22, Serial: 08819J2, 230V, Type: CX, 8.0/16.0 Amps, 3450 RPM, P56J Frame
Blower (Pump 3, Connected to Spa Pack)
Filter: Single Cartridge, Simple Filter (plumbed on Pump 1)
Jets: 20 total jets, split out to 2 main jet lines to the pad, split at the tub (1 main line for each pump), 50-60' lines to pad
Suction: 2 main suction lines to pad, 1 bottom suction to Pump2, 2 top suction to Pump1, 50-60' lines to pad
2) The Pool - In-Ground, surrounded by coping stone
Dimensions: 32' x 16' + steps with diving rock waterfall
Pump: Pentair IntelliFlo Variable Pump
Heater: Pentair MasterTemp 250
Filter: 4 Cartridge Pentair Filter
SWG: Pentair IC20
Control: IntelliCenter
The issue I believe here is the lines are 50-60ft in length, traveling underground from the pad to the tub, so the water is constantly losing heat from there, as well as the cover/usual places at the tub.
The cost is significant in the winter, but also the summer... so I think there was just poor planning of the contractor who did the backyard overhaul 3 years ago, inefficient design, pumps and spa pack used (at the time I did not know much about pool equipment, I had only used pre-fab hot tubs with sanitation/heating/pumping systems built in).
Trying to figure out if there is a way I can plumb the systems with manual/automated valves to leverage (at least a portion) of my existing equipment investment sometimes.
The initial goal would be to keep the spa at low temps always, circulating as minimally as possible (night time), then heating it up quickly when we use the spa (only every couple of weeks, or for parties).
The problem is right now I can't do that due to the Gecko IN.XE taking so long to heat the Spa temperature - even if I keep the Spa at 95F, if we want to get to 102F or so, it takes 5+ hours to do so.
My potential solution options (in order from least to most cost and intrusiveness):
1) Valve Retrofit - Retrofit some valves (manual or automatic) to leverage the MasterTemp 250 Pool Heater when I want to, so that I can keep the Spa at a much lower temp, and swap to gas heat when we periodically want to use it.
The goal would be being able to get it up to temp in a very short period of time. I can optionally (in non-winter months), likely turn off the IN.XE Gecko 5.5kW heater altogether and just use the pumps to circulate overnight, turning to the the Gas heater to heat when I need.
2) #1 Plus a Dedicated Circ Pump - add a dedicated circulation pump to replace Pump 1... as I believe circulation is also costing some $$$, especially during the winter when freeze protection kicks on every 20-30 mins and kicks both pumps and the blower on full blast. So a simple circ pump that can hit 25GPM minimum of a MasterTemp 250 if required.
3) #2 Plus Dedicated Small Gas Heater to replace Gecko IN.XE heater altogether - add a dedicated smaller MasterTemp 125 or other Gas Heater to the mix to fully replace the electric heater altogether, even for maintaining at the lower temp.
4) #3 Plus Dedicated Small IC15 Chlorinator to no longer have to use a floating Chorine puck dispenser, which is very inconsistent and annoying to keep up with in the winter.
5) Just swap everything for the Spa over to Pentair Intellicenter, use another Pentair Variable Pump, MasterTemp 125 Heater, IC15 Chlorinator and sell/forget the Spa Pack and existing pumps.
Any guidance you can provide would be appreciated... this of course could be a gradual progression - I'm just trying to figure out the most efficient path forward, whilst doing proper planning for the winter months... as I am sure some of the equipment is not meant to run in the colder months, etc.
Thanks in advance - apologies for the length of the post... trying to provide as much detail as possible.
Best Regards,
dg6464
edit: adding pictures as requested




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