After the solar cover, the heat pump stopped running almost entirely during the day, stayed at 90, and would kick on at night to help maintain the temperatureģ. Before the solar cover, the heat pump was running all day and night to maintain a ~20 degree heat differential with nighttime lows, couldn't make it to 90 degrees during the day (stayed closer to 80-85).Ģ. Surprisingly, it seemed to work rather well:ġ. So I got to work with two rolls of bubble wrap and a roll of packing tape.and wa-la! A redneck solar cover. I needed 2 rolls to cover most of my pool except for the tanning ledge. So.I made my own! Sam's Club has these roles of bubble wrap at $15/each. But, as a new pool owner I didn't want to drop $200+ on a solar cover that we may not end up using a ton, and I had no way of getting a solar cover the right size quickly between Xmas and New Years. Wanting to keep the pool heated for a week with the nighttime temps dropping into the low 60s (or lower), optimizing my energy bill, and making efficient use of my electric heat pump, I knew a solar blanket would be ideal. As a new pool owner (filled in October) that hasn't gotten a chance to use the pool much.we heated the pool up and had an Xmas day pool party! Okay! I couldn't find any example of someone else trying this on this forum, so figured I'd be the guinea pig and post about it in case anyone else gets the same crazy idea I had.ĭuring the week of Christmas/New Years here in Dallas we had uncharacteristic high temperature.was over 80 a few days and multiple days of mid to high 70s.
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