Bestway Lay-Z-Spa Vegas Inflatable Hot Tub £295 + shipping from Tesco. Cheapest I can find at the moment!
Top comments
gr1340
2 Jun 175#9
You're thinking of a pregnancy testing kit. Although, some people call these s*x ponds so you might need one.
Latest comments (40)
adam_1001
3 Jun 171#40
Ah. Decision made on the Alpine one at Studio. It's out of stock now! Haha :smirk:
adam_1001
3 Jun 17#39
Yeah... that was looking a bit of a sting... seems there's a few 10% off codes kicking around, bringing this to £247.99 so.. pretty much free delivery. Seems like this is a good price still but it pretty hard to find it much online which makes me a bit hesitant to bite!
Lexxiann
3 Jun 17#38
The MSpa looks like mine but would never pay £25 delivery cost...
It's an inflatable paddling pool, not an Olympic size swimming pool.
Skymonkey
2 Jun 17#30
Does it come with pampas grass?
Lexxiann to Skymonkey
2 Jun 17#31
Hell no!
PrivateAndConfidential
2 Jun 17#29
Bought one of these last month and a great little parasol form Ikea for £40. Great bit of fun
ando
2 Jun 171#28
I'd be careful with these, they literally eat the electricity, we got one from fashion world a month ago (250), easily uses 20 quid of power in a week, that's from heating from cold and keeping the temperature up, i'd say to use hot water from your gas, then use the 2000w heater to keep it warm as needed.
Mr.No
2 Jun 171#23
Chav-Z Spa*
callumfraser4912 to Mr.No
2 Jun 17#27
Jealous
WaxMechaniK
2 Jun 17#14
Thinking of getting an MSpa tub as everything is built in. Anyone used an MSpa?
Also I've heard people say that the LayZSpa's are very loud/noisy?
ainsy69 to WaxMechaniK
2 Jun 171#21
I have an MPSA Alpine 4 man and it's great, £250 from studio has someone above has said, everything is built in and not much noise, I've never tried the lazy spas so can't compare but this one is worth every penny.
Lexxiann to WaxMechaniK
2 Jun 171#26
We have had LZS for years but run an MSpa now. 100% better all round. FYI...18p pr hourly rate when heating and 4p pr hourly rate with just fillter running (that what my smart meter says lol) Still sounds like a hoover but reduced by 50%, can hear what we are all saying now :smiley:
How much do these cost to run? Is it best to leave it on all the time if you're using it regularly? Thanks
mistermoneysaver to scaryprowler
2 Jun 171#25
its a 2kw heater- so assuming 15p per kw(insert your cost per kw here), 30p an hour until its up to temp. Probably best to keep it on so it keeps the temp up and the heater isn't running more than it needs to. The temp reduces quickly with the top off, so I have put a roll of radiator foil between the leatheroid cover and liner. Not sure how much heat it keeps in, but it has to help. The blower for the bubbles (unless you eats copious amounts of heinz 57) is 1 kw- so 15p per hour. It has a timer on it, so you can set that along with a temp setting. I use 37 degrees, but if the suns beaming I set that to 40. I have solar pv, so try to heat it when the suns out during the day and im looking to get an economy 7 tarriff next year so I can heat it at night cheaply. Have fun!
3dprince
2 Jun 17#18
Do these cost a lot in electricity to heat the water?
imiskeen to 3dprince
2 Jun 172#24
It depends on your Tarif, Temperature, Outside ambient temp, Usage and how many times you refresh the water (i.e.: Heat from Cold.)
I'm on a fixed rate from 2016 and have been running mine in between March - Late October. It ticks over at 34 degrees on average and we use it four times a week ramping up the temp to 38 / 40 degrees when we get in, depending on ambient outside temp in the evenings. Clean it and turn down temp when we get out.
The (HONEST!) costs are as follows:
March - May = ~ £10 a Week.
June - Aug = ~ £7 a Week
Aug - Oct = ~ £12 a Week
And in answer to the "keep it on / running all the time?" question - Absolutely yes. The lower the water temp drops the more expensive they are to run. The Water Temp drops on average 4 - 5 degrees overnight if you switch it off, where as keeping it on lets the thermostat tick over, which in turn means uses ( a LOT!) less electricity. I have tested both options.
To be fair to Bestway, these tubs are fairly efficient at keeping heat in.
Obviously - These are as close to "average" figures as I can work out and you don't HAVE to run yours for the colder months if you don't want to. We personally feel its a luxury worth running. Other haters may moan and be shocked about price and ECO credentials etc. Each to their own.
If you buy one, I hope you enjoy it. Life is too short not to. :smiley:
oldskoolpug
2 Jun 17#20
Probably worth buying better chemicals so your skin isn't burnt off.....
micheleboardman
2 Jun 17#19
Studio has one in for £249.99 not sure on the make though
You might want to switch from using chlorine to bromine if that's an issue. :stuck_out_tongue:
If you have a spa, bromine has a lot of advantages over using chlorine. It may cost a little bit more, but it lasts longer and does a much better job than chlorine at killing bacteria, especially at high temperatures and high pH levels.
It'll also make your hot tub smell like a Disney water ride.
tyketyson
2 Jun 171#10
haha oops.. it's too early! clear WATER! Not sure chlorine is the most romantic aphrodisiac but each to their own :wink:
gr1340
2 Jun 175#9
You're thinking of a pregnancy testing kit. Although, some people call these s*x ponds so you might need one.
MRGRINGO
2 Jun 17#5
just use any kind of groundsheet if you want. the chemicals are really cheap on eBay (like soap powder blocks that you just put into a floating dispenser)
you need some water testing strips to make sure the water is kept clean but again they are cheap from the likes of eBay.
the heater on these can get the temp fantastically hot. we tend to set ours to 38 and that is gorgeous.
tyketyson to MRGRINGO
2 Jun 17#8
do you use the clearblue (or something?) chemicals, or are there cheaper generic ones?
7day
2 Jun 171#7
Good points as I forgot the chlorine ..holiday and ...
hawk299
2 Jun 172#6
we've tried ground sheets and found the best solution was the rubber gym matts
I found some on Ebay quite cheap
Gives it a nice comfy finish under and good insulation too
We've had the vegas for 3 years now
Chemicals from ebay too
Top tips:
- Clean the filter EVERY DAY (finger on a hose pipe to direct the spray into the grooves), it'll then last 2+ months
- Never let the chlorine tablets run out (It'll turn green slime and be unrecoverable shortly after 24 hours)
mat2090
1 Jun 171#3
Don't need a ground sheet and chemicals can be bought cheap on ebay
tomwenn to mat2090
2 Jun 17#4
Probably worth getting a plain ground sheet though, these are time consuming to clean!
nokiafusion
1 Jun 171#2
Just to point out the ground sheet £29.99 and the chemicals £29.99 need to be purchased separately
Opening post
Cheapest I can find at the moment!
Top comments
Latest comments (40)
Also I've heard people say that the LayZSpa's are very loud/noisy?
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/MSPA-Alpine-Luxury-Inflatable-2-2-Square-Portable-Jacuzzi-Hot-Tub-Spa-System-/201499277733?hash=item2eea4af9a5:g:2JsAAOSwfVpYvXqw
I'm on a fixed rate from 2016 and have been running mine in between March - Late October. It ticks over at 34 degrees on average and we use it four times a week ramping up the temp to 38 / 40 degrees when we get in, depending on ambient outside temp in the evenings. Clean it and turn down temp when we get out.
The (HONEST!) costs are as follows:
March - May = ~ £10 a Week.
June - Aug = ~ £7 a Week
Aug - Oct = ~ £12 a Week
And in answer to the "keep it on / running all the time?" question - Absolutely yes. The lower the water temp drops the more expensive they are to run. The Water Temp drops on average 4 - 5 degrees overnight if you switch it off, where as keeping it on lets the thermostat tick over, which in turn means uses ( a LOT!) less electricity. I have tested both options.
To be fair to Bestway, these tubs are fairly efficient at keeping heat in.
Obviously - These are as close to "average" figures as I can work out and you don't HAVE to run yours for the colder months if you don't want to. We personally feel its a luxury worth running. Other haters may moan and be shocked about price and ECO credentials etc. Each to their own.
If you buy one, I hope you enjoy it. Life is too short not to. :smiley:
1 or 2 in the floater (just pop 1 in each time ones nearly shrunk away, every 3 or 4 days)
just the first hit on on ebay but plenty around £13 for 50
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/NEW-1KG-CLEARWATER-MULTI-FUNCTION-SWIMMING-POOL-CHEMICAL-CHLORINE-50X20G-TABLETS-/121684975242?hash=item1c54fd5e8a:g:Uf4AAOSw-vlVh~FJ
Look after it from day 1 and PH+ or PH- is not really required
If you have a spa, bromine has a lot of advantages over using chlorine. It may cost a little bit more, but it lasts longer and does a much better job than chlorine at killing bacteria, especially at high temperatures and high pH levels.
It'll also make your hot tub smell like a Disney water ride.
you need some water testing strips to make sure the water is kept clean but again they are cheap from the likes of eBay.
the heater on these can get the temp fantastically hot. we tend to set ours to 38 and that is gorgeous.
I found some on Ebay quite cheap
Gives it a nice comfy finish under and good insulation too
We've had the vegas for 3 years now
Chemicals from ebay too
Top tips:
- Clean the filter EVERY DAY (finger on a hose pipe to direct the spray into the grooves), it'll then last 2+ months
- Never let the chlorine tablets run out (It'll turn green slime and be unrecoverable shortly after 24 hours)