All Guides
Every guide we publish about Mxmoonant — quick, direct answers to the questions readers ask most often.
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Do hot tubs help with sinuses?
Yes, hot tubs can help with sinus congestion by exposing your airways to warm, humid air that loosens mucus and temporarily reduces nasal swelling. The effect is real but short-ter
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Is it worth having a pool heater?
Yes — a pool heater is worth it if you want to extend your swim season meaningfully beyond the two or three warmest months, and you have the right size unit for your pool's gallon
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How to heat an unheated pool?
The most practical way to heat an unheated pool is to add an electric resistance heater sized to your water volume — a correctly sized unit raises pool temperature by 1–2°F per hou
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How to tell if a spa pump is bad?
A failing spa pump most commonly announces itself through three primary failure signals: loss of water flow, loud grinding or cavitation noise from the motor, or a humming sound wi
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How cold is too cold for a sauna?
A sauna room is too cold for a genuine session when it can't reach at least 150°F (65°C) — below that threshold, the heat stress that drives sweating and cardiovascular response si
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How many BTU do I need to heat a 20,000 gallon pool?
Heating a 20,000-gallon pool requires roughly 500,000–600,000 BTU to raise water temperature by 20–25°F from a cold start, and a continuous heater output of 100,000–150,000 BTU/hr
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How much does a pool heater cost for a 10,000 gallon pool?
An electric resistance pool heater sized for a 10,000-gallon pool typically runs $300–$900 for the unit itself, but a 10,000-gallon volume is well above what a single residential e
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How much does it cost to replace a spa pump?
Replacing a spa pump typically costs $200–$800 total, with the pump itself running $150–$600 depending on horsepower and motor type, plus $50–$200 in labor if you hire a technician
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What is the difference between a pool pump and a spa pump?
A spa pump is the better fit for hot tub jet systems because it is built for high-pressure, low-flow delivery through small jet ports, while a pool pump moves large water volumes a
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What is the cheapest way to heat my pool?
A solar cover (solar blanket) is the cheapest way to heat a pool because it costs $50–$150 upfront, requires no electricity, and passively captures solar energy to raise water temp