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Thread: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

  1. #1
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    Default Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    Hey folks,

    I'm assuming this will have zero affect in raising the pool temp, but I want to see if anyone else has done it (with success).

    Has anyone ever attached their garden hose to their kitchen faucet (with an adapter of course) and let hot water go into their IG pool to help heat the water temp? We have a pretty large water heater which gives us about 1 hour worth of showers. But then again we also have about a 24,000 gallon pool.

    Has anyone ever done this with any success?

  2. #2
    tundraSQ is offline Registered+ Thread Analyst tundraSQ 0
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    Default Re: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    Quote Originally Posted by NullQwerty
    Hey folks,

    I'm assuming this will have zero affect in raising the pool temp, but I want to see if anyone else has done it (with success).

    Has anyone ever attached their garden hose to their kitchen faucet (with an adapter of course) and let hot water go into their IG pool to help heat the water temp? We have a pretty large water heater which gives us about 1 hour worth of showers. But then again we also have about a 24,000 gallon pool.

    Has anyone ever done this with any success?
    I used to use it with my hot tub...but i think the pool with be a completely different story.

  3. #3
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    Default Re: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    What would you do with the water that you displaced by putting in the water? The thing that could potentially work is to pump the water from the pool, into a hot water heater, and then back to the pool, but I am sure the hot water heater needs the water to be in there a while before it will heat it up. I have heard of other methods to heat a pool. A coil of black plastic pipe, pump the water through it and set it in the sun back into the pool. Or else a coil of copper pipe, like 1", and set it in a fire and pump it back in to the pool. The copper one I get a feeling is pure BS, but the plastic one could work, but slowly I would say.

    I got a pool heater off of ebay for 560 dollars I believe, and I put it in myself, it is one of the best investments you could make if you ask me. I raised the temp of the water over 20 degrees in like 8 hours. I have had the water up to 96 before, which happens to be too hot for my tastes, but it is awesome.

  4. #4
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    Default Re: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    Quote Originally Posted by sevver
    What would you do with the water that you displaced by putting in the water?
    Running the garden hose from the sink for an hour shouldn't have much of an impact on the water level. At least it doesn't when I run just the straight garden hose. I'm lucky if it gets a millimeter higher. Even if it does have an impact though, the water just replaces the water that is evaporated during the day. I think that part of it should be fine.

    I just didn't know if it would make any sort of an impact since we're dealing with 24,000 gallons of water here. But, maybe it would. If know one has tried it, maybe I'll make a trip to home depot to get the adapter and try it out. Before going through that, anyone try it or think it would/wouldn't work?

    (By the way...I'd love to get a heater and probably will within the next few seasons, but for now...)

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    Default Re: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    It takes 8 BTU to raise a gallon of water 1 degree. Just as a SWAG, let's say the pool is at 80F, water heater is at 120F. Each gallon of water from the water heater then has 8X40=320 BTU more than the pool water. Divide that by the 24,000 gallons in the pool (ignoring the gallon added), and you will have .013333BTU, which would raise the pool temperature by around 1/1000th of a degree. The BTU content of the water in the heater starts dropping as soon as you start using it, so this is best case. Even with a 100 gallon tank, you are talking about raising the pool temp by only 1/100th of a degree. The cost would be astronomical too.

    Pool heaters are on the order of 400,000 BTU per hour. You aren't in the same ballpark.

  6. #6
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    CarlD is offline SuperMod Emeritus Vortex Adjuster CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars
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    Default Re: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    Quote Originally Posted by JohnT
    It takes 8 BTU to raise a gallon of water 1 degree. Just as a SWAG, let's say the pool is at 80F, water heater is at 120F. Each gallon of water from the water heater then has 8X40=320 BTU more than the pool water. Divide that by the 24,000 gallons in the pool (ignoring the gallon added), and you will have .013333BTU, which would raise the pool temperature by around 1/1000th of a degree. The BTU content of the water in the heater starts dropping as soon as you start using it, so this is best case. Even with a 100 gallon tank, you are talking about raising the pool temp by only 1/100th of a degree. The cost would be astronomical too.

    Pool heaters are on the order of 400,000 BTU per hour. You aren't in the same ballpark.
    Nicely done!
    Carl

  7. #7
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    Default Re: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    Why not hook a hose thru the cooling system of your car and heat it that way?

  8. #8
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    Default Re: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    Of course, all of these methods are a waste of time once you see the Redneck pool heater. http://www.redneckpoolheater.com/.

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    Default Re: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    Quote Originally Posted by imfignewton
    Why not hook a hose thru the cooling system of your car and heat it that way?
    Because that's even more inefficient than a water heater.

    Michael

  10. #10
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    Default Re: Using your kitchen faucet to heat the pool

    Quote Originally Posted by JohnT
    It takes 8 BTU to raise a gallon of water 1 degree. Just as a SWAG, let's say the pool is at 80F, water heater is at 120F. Each gallon of water from the water heater then has 8X40=320 BTU more than the pool water. Divide that by the 24,000 gallons in the pool (ignoring the gallon added), and you will have .013333BTU, which would raise the pool temperature by around 1/1000th of a degree. The BTU content of the water in the heater starts dropping as soon as you start using it, so this is best case. Even with a 100 gallon tank, you are talking about raising the pool temp by only 1/100th of a degree. The cost would be astronomical too.

    Pool heaters are on the order of 400,000 BTU per hour. You aren't in the same ballpark.

    NERD ALERT!!! Just kidding. Thanks for the great response! Saved me time and money.

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