I've got a setup that I picked up used - I got it for cheap, which is its best virtue. What I love about it is everything is modular, and it'll last a few lifetimes.
Barrel: Ice Barrel 400. I love how big it is, I hate that it's not insulated. I added 5mm close cell foam and a barrel wrap to it, and it easily holds at 45 degrees. If I could do it again I would strongly consider an insulated barrel. I would NEVER pay full price for one of these, but I think they are far better than the cheapo low volume plunges. It's really, really nice to be able to fully submerge.
Chiller: Vevor 1/3hp. It's slightly under gunned, but not bad. I would probably upgrade to a 1/2hp chiller of this kicks the can. Vevor is a great budget brand, if I built another I would use Vevor for sure.
Filtration/water treatment: in line filter + ozone generator on a 30 minute timer + Ice Barrel stabilizer. Love the ozone, I got mine from Box Plunge and it works awesome.
All of that is hooked up to an InkBird thermostat which does a great job. Overall - I would do the same thing, which is to say, obsessively check Facebook classifieds until I found a used setup that checked as many of my boxes as possible. If not that, I would start with a Vevor (1/3 or 1/2 HP depending on where you plan on having it and how cold you want it), add in ozone, etc, and find a big enough thing to plunge in (lots of decent options). I hear that the converted freezer models often fail after a few years, and they are hard to drain/clean.
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Do you have it indoors or out?
How frequently do you use it?
I don’t live in a place that expects below freezing temps (350’ el) very often. I’d very much like to keep it outside
I like the Nordic Wave Viking just from browsing online, but not sure on buying new
Upstate hot tub ftw
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That’s what I want to do: pair it with sauna
I’ve had some significant muscle imbalance stuff and a daily hot/cold seems like it could be awesome
Shower isn’t cutting it
Yeah, I have much stronger opinions on sauna than I do cold plunge, mostly because so much of what is sold as sauna in the United States is complete and total garbage. People conflate getting really hot with good sauna, and the two are NOT the same thing
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Did some laps on cold plung, sauna, and lobster pot yesterday at the hot springs. Really want that setup at home so I dont have to deal with all the people.
Is there a way to add lithium to your hot tub?
Finlandia has some great kits and some mediocre kits. They and Cedarbrook (which we have) are on the high end of kit saunas, which is a bit like being on the high end of prefab homes.
Biggest issue with US saunas is that you can't escape the laws of thermodynamics. Ventilation and (limiting) heat stratification are at the very core of what differentiates a pleasant, refreshing sauna experience from a suffocating/dizzying sauna. Both of these are largely a function of sauna height and sauna volume. Far too many US saunas leave you with cold feet and a dizzy head. While there are some clever things you can do to overcome physical limitations - like mechanical venting designed with convective heat currents in mind or using tower-style heaters - ultimately a sauna needs to be bigger than what most kit saunas are in the US. Ours is 5'x6'x7' (interior), insulated, with a tower heater and a very smart vent design, and it is the absolute smallest sauna I would ever consider. By American kit sauna standards, it's a large/6 person sauna.
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for me, i like to stretch out & at 6-5, that requires a certain interior
mrs ::: ::: never does top bench so i can either sit up or lie down up there
As an arch, I'm still trying to figure out the thermodynamics of these since all the building science envelope research is focused on conventional conditioned living spaces. Finlandia is recommending the old school wall partition makeup that they've been doing since they opened in 1964 (2x4's w/ fiber insul). When you're burning watts on resistance heating, does it make sense to insulate the enclosure such that maybe the heater doesn't cycle as much? Still searching out those answers properly...I wonder what modern scandi archs are building locally.
https://localmile.org/trumpkins-note...lding-a-sauna/
That's a great resource if you haven't seen it already. IMO where you place the thermostat, how you insulate, and making sure you have an appropriately sized heater all influence how often the heater cycles. Our preference is to get the sauna as hot as we want it (usually 210), and then just allow it to gradually cool off through our 2-3 cycles, ending around 175-180. I hate when the heater trips on.
https://www.saunatimes.com/building-...as-an-opinion/
This is also a great resource. When designing and researching our sauna, I found a really great PDF that had a lot of FLIR images of saunas. We have one vent underneath the main bench and one vent above the heater and another vent in the corner of the sauna, but we always leave that one closed.
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Happy to join this thread as we just took delivery of a Bullfrog. I've always been a bit grossed out by hot tubs but getting old with weird aches and pains and never ending soreness from working out trying to avoid said aches and pains makes it quite attractive.
She's heating up as I type and I'm looking forward to an inaugural soak tomorrow after the gym!
"All God does is watch us and kill us when we get boring. We must never, ever be boring."
Word, Hot tub you maintain yourself avoids the ick.
I wont go into most tubs, as I have worked at high end resorts and seen how off those readings can get with $ equipment and good/plentiful staff. PLus I have seen the feed/ footage from resort tubs and know what happens in there.
Hampton Inn Nowhere tub? no thanks
My total chemical expenditure is < $100/year, using Nitro's approach.
Use Ahhsome once or twice a year
to clean your pipes. It makes cleaning your tub a little more involved, because you won't believe
how much shit comes out of the pipes.
https://ahhsome.com/
Bingo. Our hot tubs were cleeeeeean. Never an issue. Regular drain/refills, keeping the chemistry dialed, and above all, cleanliness BEFORE getting in goes a long way. After a long day of skiing, we'd always make our guests shower off before getting to use our tub. When it was just ourselves tho, no swimsuits. Don't want remnants of detergents getting in there when you can help it. Clouds up the water. Really does make a difference to keep everything crystal clear and clean. By doing all these things, every time I rinsed out the filters during my drain and fills, they looked good as new and they would last FOREVER.
Public hot tubs are naaaasty tho. People's kids always party in them with their little arm floaties, acting like its the main pool.
I’m deep into a war with ants on the tub… need advice.
We normally get a small infestation on one side of the tub in the shoulder seasons. A single terro bait does the trick.
This year - entire rim, under the cover - massive infestation with eggs…. I turned it off drained it and thoroughly cleaned, put a terro bait on all 4 corners and inside the cabinet. Sprayed a perimeter product on the base and walls. That was two weeks ago. They are just laughing at me. Still fucked. They are tiny normal garden ants (not carpenters).
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Best Skier on the Mountain
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1992 - 2012
Squaw Valley, USA
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