Stop letting your old pool pump drain your wallet. Calculate exactly how much you will save on electricity by upgrading to a VSP.
If your pool pump is loud, hot to the touch, or over 7 years old, it is costing you a fortune. Here is how to find out your true return on investment (ROI):
It sounds like magic when a pool guy tells you a new pump will cut your energy bill by 80%. But it's actually just physics. It all comes down to something called the Pump Affinity Law.
With an old single-speed pump, the motor runs at 3,450 RPMs all day long, sucking massive amounts of electricity to force water through the pipes as fast as possible. But a pool doesn't need water moved fast—it just needs it moved consistently.
The law states that power consumption drops at a non-linear rate compared to motor speed. If you cut a pump's speed by half (50%), the water flow drops by 50%, but the electricity consumed drops by 87%.
By running a Variable Speed Pump at a low RPM (like 1,500 RPM) for 12 hours a day, you move the exact same amount of water as a single-speed pump running for 6 hours, but you use a fraction of the power.
Yes. As of July 2021, the Department of Energy (D.O.E.) established new regulations that made it illegal to manufacture most traditional single-speed pool pumps over 1.0 Total Horsepower. If your single-speed pump breaks, it must be replaced with a compliant VSP.
While DIY installation is possible if you are handy, it is highly recommended to hire a licensed professional. Installing a VSP involves wiring 240V electricity, securing a bare copper bonding wire to prevent electrocution, and altering PVC plumbing. Furthermore, many manufacturers (like Pentair and Hayward) will void the standard 3-year warranty and reduce it to just 60 days if the pump is not installed by a qualified professional.
Usually, no. Your current filter is perfectly capable of handling the water flow from a VSP. In fact, running a VSP at lower speeds actually improves your filter's efficiency, as it pushes water through the filter media more gently, trapping finer particles of dirt.
Now that you know how much money a new pump can save you, make sure the rest of your equipment is running efficiently.
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