Riptide XP Pool Vacuum: !!WOW!!

Commercial pools don't use SWGs because they don't make them large enough to avoid multiple cells needing to be used on one pool at the same time.
Sure they do...



 
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Its pool water, not salt water. There's a huge difference.
I'm not sure what you mean by a huge difference unless you mean seawater. My SWG pool salt level is typically between 3000-3300 ppm, and yes, that is only a tenth of seawater.

My equipment is away from the pool water, but the equipment will leak from the lid (o-ring leaks at pump stops) or a Jandy valve over a pump will drip leak, and before you know it, the pump casing is corroded to a significant degree compared to the other pump which is 7 years older. If I work on the equipment and don't wash down my metal tools, I will see the rust/corrosion, too. It sucks. I'm sure chlorine takes some responsibility, too . . . but to a lesser degree.

The big windows are far from the pool splashes, but the kids have these huge water canons that can shoot 30 feet away. They should ban those toys. :rolleyes: Did I mention salt water is bad for flagstones and joints, too? After every pool party and splashes, I have to wash down all the stones around the pool and windows with a garden hose.

In summary, my experience with the SWG is lower pool maintenance (and perhaps lower cost except that these SWG cost nearly double of what they were years ago), but the drawbacks are higher corrosion to natural stones and equipment longevity.
 
My SWG pool salt level is typically between 3000-3300 ppm, and yes, that is only a tenth of seawater.
Many 'chlorine pools' break 2000 ppm and may even surpass the 'salt pool'.

Nobody ever tests the salt level of the chlorine pool, ever, when every gallon of sodium hypochlorite adds salt.
 
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I finally purchased a Riptide XP for my small pool last week. Two full-grown pecan trees hang over the pool. I have been putting this purchase off for a long time. It always seems that something comes up that is a little more fun or needy.

I would like to try to go without a battery. Riptide stated the motor pulls about 20 amps in the water. 8-gauge wire is used to connect to the battery. For the first season of use, I am going to try: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09NVX48NT?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title&th=1 instead of a battery. Also, installing a simple panel mount power https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B73DM84Y?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title I will secure the battery box where it is far from the pool and is in an elevated position. If this little project fails, then I will go with a battery. Next season, I may move the converter to my shed and wall mount it. Installing a 25-foot, 8-gauge, 3-conductor Extension Power Cable. It should fit inside the battery box. I will install a water-resistant 12V fan on the box to aid air circulation.
 
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I finally purchased a Riptide XP for my small pool last week. Two full-grown pecan trees hang over the pool. I have been putting this purchase off for a long time. It always seems that something comes up that is a little more fun or needy.

I would like to try to go without a battery. Riptide stated the motor pulls about 20 amps in the water. 8-gauge wire is used to connect to the battery. For the first season of use, I am going to try: Amazon.com instead of a battery. Also, installing a simple panel mount power Amazon.com I will secure the battery box where it is far from the pool and is in an elevated position. If this little project fails, then I will go with a battery. Next season, I may move the converter to my shed and wall mount it. Installing a 25-foot, 8-gauge, 3-conductor Extension Power Cable. It should fit inside the battery box. I will install a water-resistant 12V fan on the box to aid air circulation.
Interested to hear how this goes. Post again and let us know with pics
 
Which manual vac do you have?
The Old school vac head and hose.

The riptide has more power but I don't see the average owner spending $1000 to shave a little time off a weekly chore while still having to do the chore. For the pros, time is money and those minutes add up quickly job after job.

For that money, the inferior robots still win IMO because it takes 2 min to go press the button to turn them on and you can run 20 cycles in the time it took to manually vacuum once. Lol.
 

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I finally purchased a Riptide XP for my small pool last week. Two full-grown pecan trees hang over the pool. I have been putting this purchase off for a long time. It always seems that something comes up that is a little more fun or needy.

I would like to try to go without a battery. Riptide stated the motor pulls about 20 amps in the water. 8-gauge wire is used to connect to the battery. For the first season of use, I am going to try: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09NVX48NT?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title&th=1 instead of a battery. Also, installing a simple panel mount power https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B73DM84Y?ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_fed_asin_title I will secure the battery box where it is far from the pool and is in an elevated position. If this little project fails, then I will go with a battery. Next season, I may move the converter to my shed and wall mount it. Installing a 25-foot, 8-gauge, 3-conductor Extension Power Cable. It should fit inside the battery box. I will install a water-resistant 12V fan on the box to aid air circulation.
I am using a 12 gauge 25 ft extension cable with a GFCI on both ends. I had the exhaust port left over from a pool pi experiment, which a 12v fan can be mounted to. I need to add one more port and test a fan. Here are a few pictures:

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My redneck solution for the time being to keep the box elevated and attached to a table and a table anchor.
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$57.00
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$10.00
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The most challenging part so far with the Riptide is installing and removing the bags. :)
 
Sobot, that's an interesting project. As for me, I bought the 35ah LifePo4 battery, and it is quite light. Also, I don't have an outlet near the pool, and I already have an ugly caddy with a cover for the Dolphin s400 (which I'm not a big fan off but spent too much money to just storing it away). Hence, I prefer no cables unless I'm cleaning. On a 68K gallon pool, I can do at least 3 to 4 vacuum before the battery goes down to about 40% per my charger. Each run time is about 30 minutes. During the spring and fall, I'll use the 100 micron bag, but for summer, I use the 60 microns and 25 microns before a swim party.

As for robots, they are like mini coopers compared to Range Rovers (the Riptide/Hammerhead). A potential true robot that I will try when it comes out is the Wybot. It is cordless, auto docks, and self empty. All these current pool robots are about 15 years behind the land vacuum bots. You still have to empty them every day or other day, you still have to pull them from the pool, and it can be a real mess when you take them out of the water. Years from now, we will ask ourselves how we were able to tolerate the inefficients of the current robots for years.

Nothing beats the good old elbow grease and great tool for the job. If the current robot works for your pool, that's great. For my pool, there is no robot on the market for any price that beats the old elbow grease. It's similar to trying to replace my lawn service with a Manmotion Luba 2 for 2.5 acre. The tech is not there. It just won't work.
 
A member told me to get the cold weather tool instead of a blunt screwdriver. I got it, and he is right. A 9 year old can remove any bag with the tool, and you'll love it even more in cold weather. For installation, I match the groove lip first on one side of the riptide (lateral either right or left wheels), then I slowly work around to bring the bag down to the other end. It creates less of a wobble, or having to "pin the riptide on the ground" to put the bag on.