- May 3, 2007
- 18,112
- Pool Size
- 20000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Hayward Aqua Rite (T-15)
The solar cover temps do depend somewhat on the type of cover. I was a assuming a clear blue bubble cover. But remember too that the temps I am showing assume at least a week of cloudless days. I am not sure that happens in your area. A cold cloudy day can reduce pool temps by quite a bit.I have a solar cover and it never reached 83F w/o solar. 80F was the highest it got and that was in late July. It would only be about 68-70 on June 1st.
A 140k BTU heat pump generates 140k BTU/hr so it can add 3,360,000 BTU per day which is 174x that which your panels can provide. To match your panel output, you would only need to run the HP slightly over an hour. With a 90F setpoint and with a cover, you would need only about 3 hours of run time. But you need to run it every day to top off the heat that is lost.So are you saying then that even if I didn't go Solar and went with a heat pump heater - which maxes out at about 140k btu, that it wouldn't help at all?
I mean I already bought the parts so I can just keep it for space heating only; but its kind of discouraging to find out that I really have no options to get my pool heated. Even if I combined the 140k btu from a heat pump heater and the 200k btu from the solar panels it sounds like it would barely make a dent. Is that right?