Hot Tub Covers, Is Your Insulated Enough?
http://home.comcast.net/~hot_tub/hot-tub-covers-information.htm
Hot tub covers can make the difference between
a high electric bill and a low one. The largest portion of heat
escapes your hot tub through the top, thus ensuring your heater
has to work harder to keep the water at your preferred temperature.
By choosing an insulated hot tub cover, you can help your heater
be more efficient.
If your hot tub came with a cover as most portable ones do, don’t
assume it’s a well-insulated one. Most hot tub covers are
insulated with EPS or Expanded Polystyrene, so you probably don’t
need to check into the type of material used. The thickness of the
PS matters, though. As a consumer, you need to look at the R-value
of the cover. The R-value refers to a material’s ability to
resist the flow of heat and is based on thickness. It can get pretty
complicated, but basically you just need to know that the higher
the R-value the better.
Standard hot tub covers run around R-value 12-15. I’ve seen
advertisers promise in excess of R-value 20, but keep in mind there’s
no universal standard mandating the outside temperature used when
testing R-value, and that does make quite a bit of difference as
to the amount of heat loss. One dealer’s R-20 might not be
the same as another dealer’s R-20.
After a certain point, you may find it more cost and energy efficient
to add a floating blanket instead of a more expensive hot tub cover.
An energy-efficient floating thermal blanket helps keep in heat
plus it reduces the amount of moisture building up on the inside
of the cover which can extend the life of your spa cover.
Keep in mind when you are buying higher R-value covers, due to
an increased thickness, they become heavier to lift. If you are
shopping for a cover for a large hot tub, yo may want to grab a
cover lifter at the same time.
Related Information:
Determining
a Quality Cover
How
to Measure for a New Hot Tub Cover