92 deg F. Love our pool heater! I recently had hip replacement surgery and water temp any cooler doesn't feel good. Outside temp mid 90's during the day, low 70's at night
That is a bit surprising. Typically an opaque pool cover does not do much to heat up a pool during the day since it blocks most of the suns heating of the bulk pool water and the conductive heating from the cover is minimal. Leaving a cover on during the day is a good idea when ambient temp is low, cloudy skies, shade, low ambient humidity, and/or higher winds. However, the devil is in the details for each specific setup as too when/if having cover on/off is good/bad :lol: How much sun does the pool get?Azmp1 said:I found that with the mild temps outside even with direct sunlight, it does not heat ip the pool as much as with the cover on as the sun really heats up the vinyl and therefore the water. So now we keep the cover on during the day, opening when we're ready to swim. As we speak my temp is at 88 right now, with the outside temp of 80. Was 86 around 11am, so around 2 degree gain in about 5 hours with a cover all all day and not the best sun conditions either.
We typically recommend not to close until the pool is consistently below 60F and open before it gets consistently above 60F to minimize the amount of spring clean up.Azmp1 said:Most my friends with no heaters already closed their pools, I'm planning to take it to at least the end of September as long as the temps stay in the mid 70's
That's true for a bubble-type cover that is well insulating, but for an automatic pool cover it's thin vinyl and only about half as insulating as a bubble-type cover. I have such an opaque electric safety cover and while it eliminates the losses from evaporation, I still get losses from conduction. The cover usually feels nearly as warm as the water it is covering and when the sun is hitting the cover it's very warm to the touch but not as hot as it would be if not conducting. I know that when we changed from a light tan cover to a dark blue cover, we now get additional heating beyond our solar, but only a couple of degrees. However, that may be because most of the gain is already from the solar. I'm just surprised that an opaque cover gets more than around 5ºF gain from average day/night temps (a bubble-type better insulating clear cover typically gets 10-15ºF higher).linen said:Typically an opaque pool cover does not do much to heat up a pool during the day since it blocks most of the suns heating of the bulk pool water and the conductive heating from the cover is minimal.
I would wait to close until the pool is consistently below 60F (I usually wait until I am consistently below 55), and open before 60F which will help keep spring cleanup to a minimum.connie said:Well got all the way into the pool yesterday. It was humid and 90 here. Pool temp up to 76 top and 72 bottom of pool. Did not matter it was to hot to stay out.
Today rainy and humid. Supposed to go into 50's by tomorrow but I am holding out closing my pool as we have yet to have Indian Summer. Perhaps by mid Oct I will give in. :-(