Hot Tub Ozonator


Hot Tub Ozonator in Aquarium Wholesalers

How to Care for the Water in Your Hot Tub

Author: Allison Ryan

The water in your hot tub is similar to that of a swimming pool and is unlike the water with which you fill your bathtub. For one thing you do need to use a hose to fill the hot tub and you do not let it empty out once you use it. This means that once you finish bathing, you simply leave it in the tub and reuse it for bathing at another time. You have to use a sanitizer to keep the water clean, just as you do with a pool. However, there is less water in the hot tub, so you don't need to use as much sanitizer.



One of the sanitizers you use for the water in the hot tub is chlorine, but you also need to use other chemicals. Bromine is one of these chemicals and is not as harsh on the skin or does it have the string chemical smell of chlorine. You do not have to pour in this chemical because it comes in the form of tablets that contain a combination of chlorine and sodium bromide. Most of these spa, hot tub (http://www.mybath.biz/besthottub.html), and Jacuzzi sanitizing systems make use of a floating brominator that helps the tablet to dissolve slowly in the water.

Another method you can use for sanitizing the water in the hot tub is an ozonator. This requires a special piece of equipment that has to be installed inside the motor, which will produce the ozone into the water to destroy the bacteria and other contaminants that will develop in the water from the use of cologne and other materials that you and your guests use in the water. However, ozone will not do everything that you need for cleaning the water and you will still need to use bromide tablets on occasion. All the newer models of spas and hot tubs do have this ozonator included in them.

It is important to test the water in spas, hot tubs (http://www.mybath.biz/servlet/the-Hot-Tubs/Categories), and Jacuzzi tubs on a regular basis to make sure it is clean. This means testing the level of the chemicals to make sure you do know how much chemicals to add. When you add chemicals from time to time, this is known as balancing the water. The pH level of the water is one of the things you should test to measure the amount of acidity. The best level to look for is a neutral pH level of 7. Anything lower than this is too acidic and will have a corrosive effect on the plumbing.

There are test strips you can purchase for this purpose, either from your spa dealer or from retailers online. Each of these strips contains little plastic squares and each one tests a different chemical in the water of the hot tub. When you find that one of the chemicals is out of balance by using this test strip, then you only have to add a small amount to the water and then retest until the strip shows that you have the proper balance.

You should drain the water out of your hot tub every three or four months and give it a good cleaning. The filter needs to be cleaned on a monthly basis and replaced once a year. When the filter is not cleaned, the water will be dirty and adding chemicals will not sanitize it as much as is needed.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/home-improvement-articles/how-to-care-for-the-water-in-your-hot-tub-1196597.html

About the Author

Allison Ryan is a freelance marketing writer from San Diego, CA. She specializes in do-it-yourself hot tub maintenance and installation, home improvement, and landscape architecture. For a wide selection of hot tubs, check out http://www.mybath.biz/.


Comments

  1. JC says:

    The ozonator and bromine tablets work very differently. Using them in combination will screw with the chemcial levels in the tub and mess up the ozonator.

  2. Above the Rest Hot Tub and Pool Repair, Inc. says:

    Paul,

    It’s not int the picture. Your ozonatore will either be a long silver looking tube, A black tube with the words Balboa on it, or a small grey or silver rectangular box that will be 6-8″ by 6-10″, with some sort of hopelly small hose likecoming from it. The easiest way to find it will be open up your spa pack look for the words ozonator where the plugs are and followit back to it. Who ever sold you the tub might have removed it. If it is the old style of ozonatore using a light bulb as the source of UV rays then you need to go ahead and replace it with a modern gas plasma CD ozonator. The light bulb style go bad really quick 2 years tops most of the time. Feel free to call us at 888-atkippy, if you need to reach me and I can talk your through it over the phone. Better picture of the interior of the are are needed. I would go ahead and take one of the pumps to where we can see your shafts. I bet they are corroded and someday soon you will be needing to replace it too. A pic of the heater inside the spa pack would be nice too.

  3. hantav1 says:

    I assume you have an automatic feeding brominator in your hot tub. You can purchase (relatively cheap) a floating brominator for your hot tub that works more or less as well compared to automatic ones.

    Ozone systems are generally ok. They can be costly to purchase and may be complicated to install (but this totally depends on your hot tub). Once installed the ozonator should do most of the sanitizing inside the tub. However, it is NOT a replacement for bromine/chlorine. You will still need a reserve of bromine, just in case. Yes its true that in the long run you may save money with an ozonator but the units will eventually fail and will be costly to repair or replace. Typically and depending on the brand and type of ozonator you have, the units last for a few years before they short out due to the corrosiveness of the ozone gas being made.

  4. Patty W says:

    can you use brominating tablets in a hot tub with an ozonator?
    I have an ozonator in my hot tub, and someone told me not to use brominating tablets because of it. Does anyone know about this? Can’t find anything in my paperwork to back it up.

  5. Thomas S says:

    Will an ozonator work as well as a brominator on a hot tub?
    The bromine system on my ThermaSpa 5 person hot tub has gone bad and parts are no longer available. Will an ozonator work in place of the original Bioquest system? We are not big fans of chlorine.

  6. Joseph D says:

    Hot tub ring from ozonator?
    The ring is brown in color and when looking at all the clear plastic pipe under the tub the brown starts just past the ozone connection. All the rest of the pipe is clean.

  7. Paul S says:

    Where does this hot tub hose go?, Part 2 (Ozonator)?
    Dr. Hot Tub gave me a good answer regarding what a stray connector tube is for in my hot tub — the ozonator. However, I can’t find the ozonator — where is it in relationship to my other devices (the motor, the heater, etc.). See photo:
    http://mysite.verizon.net/mx45/hottub_hose.jpg

  8. windancerhil says:

    Having been in the pool industry 35 years, and seen what ozonators do and don’t do, my advice is to avoid them at all costs. They are overpriced, underbuilt, and break down a lot. Plus they offer no real advantages– except on paper. “Buy this magic machine and save yourself lots of work”. Piffle. That’s what I’ve found in my experience.

  9. Frank Pytel says:

    Remove it.

    God Bless

  10. lulu says:

    Spa ozonator for new hot tub?
    We just got a new hot tub and it didn’t come with an ozonator. Should we get one of these put on? Has anyone had a hot tub with one and without one and notice a difference?

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