And if you are going to do glacier make sure you get it installed when doing new. It's simple - just one more return dedicated for the glacier chiller. If you do it after the fact their installation is very convoluted.
While I agree that having one installed during the original build is the best way to go, I don’t think there’s anything convoluted about an after the fact installation, which is what I had done. When I bought mine, I talked to a few references before the purchase and all of them had added their Glaciers after the fact. Our installation was done in a day by one person and it works great!If you do it after the fact their installation is very convoluted.
No...I simply stated what it was while I was running it. Humidity varies throughout the day you know. You have already turned your nose up at the chiller. This thread is about the chiller. If you have practical experience with one...please tell us all about it.You contradictded yourself. You stated in your first email it was 84% humidity but in this email you state humidity went from 80-60%? That is a big difference. When the humidity dropped over night is when you got the cooling. If you run it with 80+% humidity the cooling effect will be reduced. It can only cool to dew point. Not possible to cool below that. Now Pentair and a couple other companies have developed some very efficient heat pumps. I have a gas heater and will use it for heating the hot tub/pool and use heat pump to cool. The nice thing about a heat pump is you can set the temp and forget. You can also set it to get to a temp and have it turn off. So cool from 88F water at 8pm to 82F water overnight and once it hits 82 it will turn off and not come back on.
Ok calm down.No...I simply stated what it was while I was running it. Humidity varies throughout the day you know. You have already turned your nose up at the chiller. This thread is about the chiller. If you have practical experience with one...please tell us all about it.
We are thinking of getting a chiller but read that the maintenance is a little tough if you have a salt system. Do you have salt or chlorine? Has that been an issue?I’m in the Dallas area, so our climate is not quite as humid as yours, but close. The Glacier was the best investment I’ve made in our pool. We went from water temps in the mid-90s to low-80s and can even drop into the 70s when humidity drops below 45%. There are quite a few members on TFP that live in the Houston area that are having similar success with their Glaciers, and I think Houston’s combined heat and humidity is worse than yours.
Ive had a Glacier Chiller in Houston for the past 4 years. It’s work’s phenomenally. Right now my water is 84 degrees at 11:30 AM and it’s 102 deg outside with rediculous humidity. Whoever said it doesn’t work in high humidity is LYING TO YOU. Of course pool builders would rather sell you a heat pump. It’s more expensive, breaks routinely, and they get kick backs from the major equipment companies for selling it. Mine was put in by the pool builder. Power wise I don’t even notice the change and I run the thing 14 hours a day. I have several friends with heat pumps and they are switching out to Chillers.I have seriously considered the Glacier and after a lot of research (regardless of what Glacier says) the system will not work well in high humidity areas like Houston. I have called them twice and talked to their designers and both times have been treated like a child. Another red flag I have encountered is no reputable pool builders will install them. The only installers I can find in Houston are HVAC or pool cleaning companies. Sorry, but I am not going to let a pool cleaning service install pool equipment requiring automated valves and tying into my Pentair control panel. Based on this I will probably go with a Pentair heat pump, which really is the correct way to do it.
Yes, salt and no, it hasn’t been an issue at all. The unit itself is made of fiberglass and the fan blade are plastic. There’s really not much metal on it at all.Do you have salt or chlorine? Has that been an issue?
This is 100% true. It's 100 here straight up noon and my pool is currently 86. My pool is in full sun from about 8AM till 7PM every day. It might make warm up another degree...but that's it. Without the chiller it would be 93 or 94 degrees. Salt pool and zero issues with chiller.Ive had a Glacier Chiller in Houston for the past 4 years. It’s work’s phenomenally. Right now my water is 84 degrees at 11:30 AM and it’s 102 deg outside with rediculous humidity. Whoever said it doesn’t work in high humidity is LYING TO YOU. Of course pool builders would rather sell you a heat pump. It’s more expensive, breaks routinely, and they get kick backs from the major equipment companies for selling it. Mine was put in by the pool builder. Power wise I don’t even notice the change and I run the thing 14 hours a day. I have several friends with heat pumps and they are switching out to Chillers.
I agree completely. I certainly gave it a try before moving on to the Glacier. I tried 2 different kinds of misters/sprayers and they only dropped the water a couple of degrees. The wind would also blow the spray onto the surrounding landscaping and that was doing some damage.Evaporative cooling really works and it's free.
Did you get a pool cooler? If so, how do you like it?I am highly considering a Glacier chiller because we live in Tampa and will not have a screen and our max pool depth is going to be 4'6". Has anyone on here had a Glacier in FL? I appreciate the help!