Spa Maintenance


Easy Hot Tub Water Care and Spa Maintenance - Spa Accessories

Basic Tips for Spa Maintenance

Author: John Olson

Chances are you have received a wealth of conflicting information on how to take care of your hot tub. Friends and family offer helpful tips, your owner's manual comes with a long list of prescriptions and your chemical testing kit probably has its own suggestions. With all of this information available, how do you know what is useful?



There are a few basic rules that all hot tub owners ought to follow in order to ensure a safe and pleasant spa experience for everyone, including maintaining your water and chemicals, and ensuring that all parts are operating correctly. Taking time to maintain your hot tub can save you time and money down the road as you will not need to replace parts or drain the water as often!

1. Change Your Water Every 3, 4, or 6 months

This depends on frequency of usage and whether your hot tub is well maintained. Hot tubs that have efficiently working spa parts and whose water is treated may last longer, but remember, no amount of chemical additives can protect you completely in water that is old and dirty. To be on the safe side, change the water quarterly.

2. Daily Duties

Some hot tub maintenance tasks need to be completed daily to make sure you hot tub runs smoothly and to avoid larger, more serious problems down the road. These tasks take a few minutes a day:

Check your pH levels: should be between 7.2 and 7.6.

Check chlorine levels: should be between 1-3 mg/l (ppm). Use Hot Tub pH Plus or Minus according to instructions to recalibrate.

Bromine is more common in hot tubs and bromine should be between 2-4 ppm.

Check for foam

3. Weekly Duties

It is important to do the following on a weekly basis so as to not let dirt or grime pile up as this will results in more work in the future, as well as potentially damaging your equipment:

Shock hot tub

Clean your spa filter: make sure the filter is placed correctly in the canister to ensure that the water is filtered and to maximize jet pressure. Replace filters every twelve months as degraded filters will cause cloudy water. If your filter is under a year old, make sure to clean it on a monthly basis and soak it in degreaser. Always have a spare 2nd filter as filters have to be allowed to dry first so that the fibers can bind together after cleaning.

Check your water: how often you need to check your water depends on a variety of factors - your frequency of usage, whether you use a hot tub cover, whether the spa part are functioning correctly, etc. In general, it is a good idea to check your water twice a week, just to be on the safe side.

4. Clean Your Hot Tub Cover

Every 6 months, clean your hot tub cover with a diluted chlorine solution that includes UV protection

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/bath-showers-articles/basic-tips-for-spa-maintenance-3401515.html

About the Author

Ashley Olson, Hot Tub Warehouse. Hot Tub Warehouse is a supplier of quality hot tub parts and accessories, including fitted spa covers and hot tub covers. For a wide selection of hot tub chemicals, testing supplies, filters and more, please visit Hot Tub Warehouse.


Comments

  1. jeffj98735 says:

    I’ve had a portable spa for ~5 years and originally had a ozone generator and used bromine for sanitization.. I had some repair work done and asked the repair guy, since he sees a lot of spas and MUST have some idea about what not to do. He advised chlorine to sanitize and whatever it takes to balance pH (it differs for every area, depending on what your water supply). He said chlorine is the simplest and cheapest solution. It was great advice. I’ve been doing it that way for 2-3 years and all it takes is a couple of tablespoons of chlorine after using the spa, a chlorine shock once every 2-4 weeks, an once-a-month water balance. It’s a fairly easy routine. Try it.

  2. gentle giant says:

    Check the chemical levels at least once a week. More often if it gets used alot.

  3. dmart50493 says:

    Spa maintenance?
    What is the best way to maintian a spa’s cleanliness?

  4. dmart50493 says:

    Spa Maintenance?
    What is the best way to maintain the cleanliness of a portable spa? Bromine, chlorine, baking soda etc.? My spa guy say just bromine and baking soda however; the bromine tablets take forever to break down…oh yeah, the spa contains about 400 gallons.

  5. Soleil F says:

    Give tips on spa cover maintenance?
    Give some effective measures to clean the spa cover and handling…

  6. Nic Barbosa says:

    Spa maintenance trouble.?
    I just started up the jacuzzi and the ph levels are high 10(20) bromine 10, hardness caco very low allkalinity low ph levels as well. How do I get them up do I put somthing else other then chlorine tablet. Or is it okay to start scheduling a little BBQ and spa. Thanks any answer will be appreciated.

  7. Cookie says:

    baking soda will neutralize the soap and soften the water

  8. Dale says:

    I would change the water and start off fresh. Regards, Dale

  9. B K says:

    Spa is foaming like an episode of ‘I Love Lucy’ – help needed?
    Okay here’s what happened: my spa has a tile-covered waterfall along the back. I cleaned the tile with Tilex brand tile cleaner. It contains phosphoric acid but the label did not mention detergents. I used perhaps 1/4 – 1/2 cup for 2 8′X6′ panels of tile.
    When I turned on the jets (it doesn’t foam when the waterfall is on) the soap bubbles were so deep they looked like some slapstick comedy routine Kramer from Seinfeld would find himself in. All I needed was a horse to feed some Beef-a-reeno to and I was set.
    Any ideas – short of draining the spa – on how to reduce the foaming? My pool guy is out of town for a week and a half on vacation. Thanks, fellow spa owners/pool maintenance people!

  10. Subha says:

    Routine spa cover cleaning is essential to spa maintenance. Leaving dirt on the topcoat will cause wearing & fading. You may periodically rinse the cover with cool water approximately once a month in the summer time and once every 3-4 months for other seasons. Apply non-foaming cleansing spray and wipe off with a towel. Do not use laundry detergent, alcohol, bleach, dish washing soap, or other potent cleaners as they may damage the vinyl surface or cause premature failure.

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