Jean:
How big is your pool and how many hours of sunshine do you get? How warm do you want your pool?
We are seeing 87 banging on $3/gal here, and premium close to $4. This will impact ALL fossil fuels--and propane and natural gas prices will rise alot to compensate. If cost is an issue on a heat pump, what will it cost per month to run the gas heater?
Ballpark, gas heaters seem to run $1000-$1500, and heat pumps from $2500 to $4000. So figure a heat pump to cost $1500 more on average, before installation. Both require an electrician. But where you must have plumber rig the gas, you can do all the plumbing on the HP yourself.
So maybe an extra $500 for the install on gas. Now how long will it take that gas heater to eat up the $1000 you saved? That's the question. If it's within one season, it's a bad investment. And propane costs a lot more usually than natural gas.
I could have the figures wrong, and you have to figure in the cost of running the heat pump, but you get the idea.
To give you an idea of how little you need for solar to be effective: My parents had an 18x33 13,000 AG. I put in a 4x20 and 4x10 panel for them. The panels were on the ground, and only got 6 hours of sun a day. The pool, which in the past had NEVER gotten higher than 80 and usually was 78, now was 84-86 all summer. The panels also warmed the ground under them, so they could run for a couple of hours after the sun passed and still be effective. Remember: If the water from the panel is ANY warmer than the pool, even 1 degree, it's helping.
Combine that with careful use of a solar blanket to insulate at night, on cool days, and when you aren't using the pool, and you can effectively warm your pool with no energy costs.
Just IMHO.
Carl
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