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Hello,I'm considering a Bullfrog X7L and I wanted to get an idea of actually operating costs I can expect per month?The salesman tells me my electric bill will not increase more than $20 bucks? That seems low? Also, what can I expect for costs with chemicals?Thanks!
I'd be shocked to see a bullfrog cost $50 a month unless you live at altitude and even then probably not. Bullfrog are very efficient. I have a guy at 9k feet and the best estimate that he has on monthly energy increase is about $35 in the coldest month of the year.
Quote from: Sam on February 15, 2019, 03:16:06 pmI'd be shocked to see a bullfrog cost $50 a month unless you live at altitude and even then probably not. Bullfrog are very efficient. I have a guy at 9k feet and the best estimate that he has on monthly energy increase is about $35 in the coldest month of the year.I'll give you a 100% assurance a bullfrog can cost 50 bucks a month. Quit the pitch. Initial start up, Northern Minnesota climate, heavy use, all these things affect cost. BF is no exception and not as efficient as other tubs out there. Want to be shocked, come to Northern Minnesota.
Tman, it's not a pitch. It's experience with 1000's of customers in a mountain climate. I'm tired of arguing with you about bullfrog. You've seen a total of 3 in your life so clearly i'm wrong and you are right.
Quote from: Sam on February 16, 2019, 01:10:01 pmTman, it's not a pitch. It's experience with 1000's of customers in a mountain climate. I'm tired of arguing with you about bullfrog. You've seen a total of 3 in your life so clearly i'm wrong and you are right.My post was 100% accurate, read it again. Give me the amp draw on the motor/s and wattage of heater and hours of usage along with climate and I can estimate it better but giving a range of 15 to 50 and asking for more info is accurate even if you don't want it to be. I never even considered the brand into the equation. Somehow you see it as a cut on BF but you always do.If your tired of arguing give facts and not sales pitch. Meter one. I've metered hundreds. Even a small HS circ pump and heater can run over 50 here where I live. And a 30 dollar average is pretty close for most higher end brands. And I've seen BF's insulation, meh. The OP's salesman lied to him.
Quote from: Tman122 on February 16, 2019, 08:11:56 pmQuote from: Sam on February 16, 2019, 01:10:01 pmTman, it's not a pitch. It's experience with 1000's of customers in a mountain climate. I'm tired of arguing with you about bullfrog. You've seen a total of 3 in your life so clearly i'm wrong and you are right.My post was 100% accurate, read it again. Give me the amp draw on the motor/s and wattage of heater and hours of usage along with climate and I can estimate it better but giving a range of 15 to 50 and asking for more info is accurate even if you don't want it to be. I never even considered the brand into the equation. Somehow you see it as a cut on BF but you always do.If your tired of arguing give facts and not sales pitch. Meter one. I've metered hundreds. Even a small HS circ pump and heater can run over 50 here where I live. And a 30 dollar average is pretty close for most higher end brands. And I've seen BF's insulation, meh. The OP's salesman lied to him.I agree with you on the cost(s)...but as far as insulation being 'meh' you are 100% dead wrong and I have dozens upon dozens of pictures to prove it...they full fill the cabinet even on a $5,995 X5L...I had a 15k Sundance Maxxus on our wet rack a couple months ago, they don't even full fill the cabinet, either does Jacuzzi and other tops brands selling for 10k-15k....Hot Spring/Caldera and Bullfrog are 2 of the only companies I know that actually stand behind a 'Full Foam' sales pitch and back it up by actually fully filling the cabinet space, you can probably toss Marquis into that conversation although I haven't seen inside a brand new one...Sundance and Jacuzzi are by far the biggest joke, they should be advertised as 'Half Foam'