So I had a pool guy come and replace the the old pool heater that was on the pool that came with the house. The pool is roughly 27,000 gallons gunite pool with a surface area of about 935sqft. When I initially talked to him he told me he would install a 350k BTU gas heater. Then when he showed up with the heater he brought a Raypak 266 with him, which is a 266k BTU heater. I asked him why the bait and switch and he said I made a mistake and thought this is what you already had on the pool, however he said as you can see you have a 266k BTU heater and this is what I'm replacing it with. He went on to explain how you can't just put in a larger heater and should replace older parts with newer parts of the same capacity. My wife set this all so I had no time to properly research all of this and since this is the type of heater I already had I got him to knock down a few hundred dollars because he was putting in a less powerful heater and that's it.
So now after reading around online it seems like I should have gotten the 350K BTU heater because it seems like the correct size heater for us and also since I only use it intermittently a more powerful heater will heat the pool quicker. We only use the pool on the weekends and it's taking a few days for the pool heater to warm up the pool. I'm in Michigan this weekend it's been sunny and in the high 70's low 80's during the day and low 60's at night. I'm trying to warm up the pool to 80 degrees but it seems like it's only going up by 1 degree an hour if not less. My pool pump runs only 8 hrs a day and thus the heater only runs 8 hrs a day from 1pm till 9pm. I did turn everything on at 9am today in hopes that I would be able to go swimming this late afternoon but the pool is still too cold.
I'm new to all this so my questions to the forum are: 1) Did the original pool owners undersized their pool heater and thus this guy undersized the replacement heater? 2) Should I have gotten the more powerful heater because of the way I use my pool I.e. Only on the weekends and I don't want to run the heater all the time just so the pool is ready on the weekends. 3) should I continue to run the pool pump and heater only 8 hrs a day or on the weekends when I want to swim I should run it 24hrs a day so that it's always ready and then just run the pool pump by itself for 8 hrs a day during the week? 4) how do you guys use your pool heaters? 24hrs a day or only for 8 hrs a day but everyday? Any other suggestions or recommendations are welcome.
Thank you you for taking time to answer my questions.
So now after reading around online it seems like I should have gotten the 350K BTU heater because it seems like the correct size heater for us and also since I only use it intermittently a more powerful heater will heat the pool quicker. We only use the pool on the weekends and it's taking a few days for the pool heater to warm up the pool. I'm in Michigan this weekend it's been sunny and in the high 70's low 80's during the day and low 60's at night. I'm trying to warm up the pool to 80 degrees but it seems like it's only going up by 1 degree an hour if not less. My pool pump runs only 8 hrs a day and thus the heater only runs 8 hrs a day from 1pm till 9pm. I did turn everything on at 9am today in hopes that I would be able to go swimming this late afternoon but the pool is still too cold.
I'm new to all this so my questions to the forum are: 1) Did the original pool owners undersized their pool heater and thus this guy undersized the replacement heater? 2) Should I have gotten the more powerful heater because of the way I use my pool I.e. Only on the weekends and I don't want to run the heater all the time just so the pool is ready on the weekends. 3) should I continue to run the pool pump and heater only 8 hrs a day or on the weekends when I want to swim I should run it 24hrs a day so that it's always ready and then just run the pool pump by itself for 8 hrs a day during the week? 4) how do you guys use your pool heaters? 24hrs a day or only for 8 hrs a day but everyday? Any other suggestions or recommendations are welcome.
Thank you you for taking time to answer my questions.