Heater/Chiller ?

bjxds

Well-known member
Sep 27, 2023
51
Virginia
We had a pool installed last year and had the pad roughed in plumbing and elec for heater/chiller. We are thinking of adding a heater/chiller.

2 friends have pools with heaters, and they are expensive to install and run, but it adds about a month on each end, but they really like it.

Looking for more info on chillers ? There are times when my pool hits 90 during the summer, and it would be Great to cool it down??
 
Looking for more info on chillers ? There are times when my pool hits 90 during the summer, and it would be Great to cool it down??
I have a heat pump with chill capability. It works reasonably well and I like that one piece of equipment performs two functions. The heat extends the swim season by a couple months and the chill function is great in the middle of summer.
 
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I put in a Jandy Versatemp heat pump combo chiller/heater last summer and it’s been great. My pool temp in Houston was hitting 90+ by June. Ran it a couple days and got back down to comfortable temps. We used the heater to get it a little warmer and usable at spring break. I don’t think the cost to run it has been outrageous.
 
We already had a gas heater, so I went with a Glacier chiller. It gave the pool new life. Water temps were hitting mid-90s by early July and the pool wasn’t very refreshing. I can now keep water temps in the low- to mid-80s all summer long.

It’s not without its flaws though. My biggest beef with Glacier is not including some kind of sensor to shut it off if the sump pump fails. The way it works is that pool water is sprayed by rotating wands over plastic grids. As the water runs down the grids, a fan pulls air up and across, increasing evaporation and cooling the water - basically a swamp cooler. The water falls into a basin that has a pump with a float switch. Water gets to a certain level, triggering the pump and is pumped back to the pool. However, if that pump fails, there’s nothing to stop the process and the basin will overflow, ultimately draining the pool. Making matters worse, the most effective time to run the chiller is at night. A simple float switch above the pump’s water line that would shut off the chiller would solve the problem.

Having said that, I’ve had the Glacier for something like 10 years. No pump failure (yet). If we’re out of town, I just turn the chiller off. Otherwise, it runs 3am - 9pm every day and keeps the pool right where I like it. It can also be used on demand instead of on a regular schedule, but you have to plan at least 2-3 days in advance. Contrary to Glacier’s claims, I don’t get 10°-12° cooling overnight. It’s more like 3°-5°.