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2026-06-01
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WattSizing Engineering Team

Panduan Tenaga Luar Ruangan, Kolam Renang & Sumur: Pompa, EV, dan Pemanas Air

Pompa kolam, pompa sumur dan bah, pemanas air, pengisi daya kendaraan listrik, dan bak mandi air panas—dengan skenario lonjakan arus, realitas 240 V, dan kWh harian.

pompa kolampompa dengan baikpengisi daya EVpemanas airpompa bah

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Beban luar dan mekanis—kolam, sumur, pompa sump, pemanas air, EVSE—adalah tempat puncak W dan kWh harian paling berbeda.

Pompa kolam variable-speed bisa memangkas kWh besar sementara LRA pompa sumur tetap menentukan surge generator.

Panduan ini mencakup setiap cluster luar ruangan termasuk perbandingan garasi, peralatan kebugaran, dan pemanas air.

Pekerjaan yg membosankan600–1,200Motor0.3–1.0Puncak tanjakan
Pemanas air (tangki)3,000–5,5008–15Resistif 240 V
Pemanas bak mandi air panas1,500–6,0005–15240V
Pemanas kolam (pompa panas)1,000–5,000Compressor10–40+Musiman
Pengisi daya EV L23,300–11,50010–40+32–48 A
Pompa bah400–1,0001,500–3,0000.2–2Badai tumpang tindih
Pompa sumur (1 HP)750–1,5002,000–4,000+0.5–3240 V umum
Pompa kolam (1,5 HP SS)1,500–2,3002,500–3,8008–20Hukum afinitas untuk VS

Typical ranges for planning — confirm with nameplate labels and your use pattern.

Untuk desain off-grid seluruh rumah, lihat Panduan Lengkap Sistem Tenaga Surya Off-Grid (Edisi 2026). Buat daftar beban di Cara Menyusun Daftar Beban Akurat untuk Sizing Solar Off-Grid, lalu modelkan puncak beban di WattSizing Calculator.

Pool pump single-speed vs variable-speed

Single-speed 1.5 HP ~1,900 W × 8 h15 kWh/day. VS 350 W × 16 h5.6 kWh/day same turnover—affinity law. Surge 2,500–3,800 W on SS starts.

Timer strategy: Run VS pump longer at low RPM for required turnovers—16 h × 400 W beats 8 h × 1,900 W on kWh. Confirm local health code turnover rules.

Winter: Drain/plug single-speed pumps in freeze zones—off-season standby watts still matter for VS electronics.

Affinity law recap: Power ∝ RPM³—50% RPM12.5% power theoretically. Real VS pumps 300–500 W average vs 1,900 W single-speed 8 h.

Seasonal kWh: 15 kWh/day single-speed summer vs 5 kWh/day tuned VS—solar pool owners often ROI VS in 1–3 seasons of electric savings.

Utility rate impact: 15 kWh/day pump at $0.16$2.40/day summer—VS pump retrofit often pays back in 2–4 years in swim climates.

Noise vs RPM: Lower RPM at night saves neighbor noise and Wh—automation controllers worth it on time-of-use rates.

Utility rate impact: 15 kWh/day pump at $0.16$2.40/day summer—VS pump retrofit often pays back in 2–4 years in swim climates.

Noise vs RPM: Lower RPM at night saves neighbor noise and Wh—automation controllers worth it on time-of-use rates.

Variable speed programming: 3 speeds per day beats single low speed 24/7 for water clarity and kWh.

Freeze mode: VS drives may run 50 W anti-freeze circulate—winter baseload.

Pool heat pump and resistance

Heat pump pool heaters 1–5 kW running; resistance 5 kW+. Seasonal kWh can exceed pump. Generator planning often excludes heat during outages.

Heat pump pool: 3–5 kW running; electric resistance: 5–11 kW. Often larger than pump on meter—shed heat first on backup.

Solar thermal: Zero electric heat—but pump still required for collectors.

Gas vs heat pump pool: Gas heater BTU/h not on electric bill; heat pump pool 3–5 kW on meter—do not compare sticker without fuel type.

Cover rule: Uncovered pool heater runs 2–3× longer—cover is the best “efficiency device.”

Gas vs heat pump pool: Gas heater BTU/h not on electric bill; heat pump pool 3–5 kW on meter—do not compare sticker without fuel type.

Cover rule: Uncovered pool heater runs 2–3× longer—cover is the best “efficiency device.”

Well pump LRA and 240 V

1 HP ~750–1,500 W running; LRA can 3,000–4,000+ W. Dominates rural backup. 240 V two-wire plus ground common—transfer must support.

Pressure tank: Larger tank reduces starts per day—lowers surge frequency, not surge height. Submersible LRA often exceeds table saw inrush.

240 V two-wire: Many wells are 240 V without neutral—transfer equipment must be compatible.

HP to watts: 1 HP ≈ 746 W mechanical; 1 HP submersible often 750–1,500 W at meter due to efficiency and controls.

Cycle: Pump fills tank to 40/60 psi2–5 min run, 1–3 kWh/day household water total depending on family size.

Depth penalty: Deep well 1.5–2 HP submersibles 1,000–2,000 W running; shallow ½ HP 500–900 W—depth matters more than household count.

Pressure switch: Failed switch causes rapid cycling—high kWh and burned contacts; electrical symptom is erratic W readings.

Depth penalty: Deep well 1.5–2 HP submersibles 1,000–2,000 W running; shallow ½ HP 500–900 W—depth matters more than household count.

Pressure switch: Failed switch causes rapid cycling—high kWh and burned contacts; electrical symptom is erratic W readings.

Constant pressure: Variable-frequency well controllers soften starts—generator sees lower LRA than old pressure-tank slap.

Shared circuit: Well on same panel as deep freezer—stagger manually during outage.

Sump pump during storms

400–1,000 W running; overlaps exactly when grid fails. Size backup for pump + fridge coincidence.

Backup priority: ⅓ HP 600–800 W running; ½ HP 800–1,000 W. Battery backup sump systems use 12 V DC pumps separately—different math than whole-home gen.

Storm overlap: Grid fails when sump runs most—size gen for sump + fridge coincidence.

Head height: Vertical lift adds hydraulic load—same ½ HP pump uses more W if discharge pipe long.

Gen test: Monthly 10 s generator test under sump + fridge load verifies real-world surge, not spec sheet.

Head height: Vertical lift adds hydraulic load—same ½ HP pump uses more W if discharge pipe long.

Gen test: Monthly 10 s generator test under sump + fridge load verifies real-world surge, not spec sheet.

Backup battery unit: 12 V 75 Ah dedicated—separate from house kWh math.

Dual float: Redundant switches prevent overflow; both same pump W.

Hot tub heater

1.5–6 kW; maintain temp is continuous resistive or heat pump.

240 V spa: 5.5 kW heater 1–3 h/day maintenance 5–16 kWh/day—often excluded from backup.

Idle circulation: 24/7 pump 150–300 W = 3.6–7.2 kWh/day even without heating.

Standby losses: 104°F idle tub 3–8 kWh/day depending on cover—often more than fridge in winter.

Backup: Most outage plans drain or insulate tub, not heat it electrically.

Standby losses: 104°F idle tub 3–8 kWh/day depending on cover—often more than fridge in winter.

Backup: Most outage plans drain or insulate tub, not heat it electrically.

Garage door opener

400–800 W brief; low kWh.

Peak: 400–800 W 1–2 s; standby 3–5 W. Negligible on generator planning unless dozens of cycles/hour.

LED lighting on opener: 100 W incandescent door bulbs upgraded to 10 W LED—small saving, many cycles add up.

Battery backup opener: Separate 12 V door battery—not counted in house kWh if independent.

LED lighting on opener: 100 W incandescent door bulbs upgraded to 10 W LED—small saving, many cycles add up.

Battery backup opener: Separate 12 V door battery—not counted in house kWh if independent.

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Tank water heater

3,000–5,500 W 240 V; 2–3 h/day heating ≈ 8–15 kWh/day.

Tank electric: 4,500 W element 2 h/day9 kWh/day family of four—often #2 load after HVAC.

Timer: Shift heating to solar noon on off-grid—reduces battery stress.

Element wattage: 4,500 W is two 4,500 W elements alternating on 240 V, not necessarily simultaneous—read wiring diagram.

Recirc loop: Hot recirc pump 25–80 W 24/7 adds 0.6–2 kWh/day before anyone showers.

Element wattage: 4,500 W is two 4,500 W elements alternating on 240 V, not necessarily simultaneous—read wiring diagram.

Recirc loop: Hot recirc pump 25–80 W 24/7 adds 0.6–2 kWh/day before anyone showers.

Time-of-use: Timer off peak fill saves money, not W—still 4,500 W when heating.

Anode rod: Bad anode causes longer heat cycles indirectly—maintain tank.

Water dispenser

50–150 W cooling/heat; small baseload.

Hot/cold counter: 80–150 W average; 24/7 2–3.6 kWh/day—surprising baseload in offices.

Office break room: 3 units × 100 W 24/77 kWh/day—treat as small appliance baseload in commercial backup.

Peltier vs compressor: Peltier units lower peak, higher duty—check nameplate.

Office break room: 3 units × 100 W 24/77 kWh/day—treat as small appliance baseload in commercial backup.

Peltier vs compressor: Peltier units lower peak, higher duty—check nameplate.

Elliptical trainer

150–400 W while in use.

Home gym: 150–400 W while exercising 30–60 min0.08–0.4 kWh/session—low priority vs well pump.

Home vs gym: Commercial elliptical LCD + fan 200–400 W; home 150–250 W typical.

Duty: 30 min 200 W = 0.1 kWh—skip on priority shed lists.

Home vs gym: Commercial elliptical LCD + fan 200–400 W; home 150–250 W typical.

Duty: 30 min 200 W = 0.1 kWh—skip on priority shed lists.

Treadmill

600–1,200 W; incline peaks higher.

Incline run: 800–1,200 W; walk 600–800 W. 1 h/day 0.6–1.2 kWh—size inverter continuous to motor controller peak.

DC motor controllers: Incline commands spike brief 1,400 W on 1,000 W rated treadmills—size inverter to nameplate, not “average jog.”

Fold-up treadmills: Smaller motors 600–900 W—RV/off-grid friendly if fitness is priority.

DC motor controllers: Incline commands spike brief 1,400 W on 1,000 W rated treadmills—size inverter to nameplate, not “average jog.”

Fold-up treadmills: Smaller motors 600–900 W—RV/off-grid friendly if fitness is priority.

Level 2 EV charger

3,300–11,500 W (16–48 A at 240 V). Often largest home load—dedicated circuit.

Load management: Utility EVSE programs cap charge rate during peaks—backup rarely includes EV unless whole-home 22 kW class.

120 V emergency: Level 1 1.4 kW may add 30+ hours for a partial pack—plan as days, not hours.

Level 2 math: 32 A × 240 V = 7,680 W max; 40 A 9,600 W. 4 h at 7 kW = 28 kWh—full EV pack partial refill.

Generator reality: L2 on gen rare; Level 1 1.4 kW 24 h = 33 kWh still large.

Panel space: 60 A 240 V EV breaker needs full size in main panel—generator transfer must not backfeed EV circuit unless intended.

Solar offset: 12 kWh EV charge needs 3–4 kW solar dedicated in sun hours—separate from house loads in design.

Panel space: 60 A 240 V EV breaker needs full size in main panel—generator transfer must not backfeed EV circuit unless intended.

Solar offset: 12 kWh EV charge needs 3–4 kW solar dedicated in sun hours—separate from house loads in design.

Load sharing EVSE: Some chargers dial down when house load high—reduces peak W, extends charge time.

J1772 vs NACS: Connector type does not change kW rating—breaker size does.

120 V vs 240 V EV charging

120 V 1.4–1.9 kW slow; 240 V L2 3.3–11.5 kW faster, lower losses per kWh delivered in many installs. Backup rarely charges EV unless intentionally sized.

Efficiency: 240 V charging reduces I²R loss in premises wiring vs 12 A 120 V long cord—faster and slightly cleaner per kWh delivered to pack.

Emergency: 120 V 12 A 1.44 kW adds ~4 miles/hour EPA average equivalent—plan days not hours.

Mobile connector: Tesla 12 A 120 V 1.44 kW vs 32 A 240 V 7.68 kW—same car, slower on 120 V.

Generator L1: Emergency 120 V 12 A from gen is 1.44 kW20+ h for meaningful range.

Mobile connector: Tesla 12 A 120 V 1.44 kW vs 32 A 240 V 7.68 kW—same car, slower on 120 V.

Generator L1: Emergency 120 V 12 A from gen is 1.44 kW20+ h for meaningful range.

Gas vs electric water heater cost

Electric resistive 3–5 kW; gas burner minimal electric (50–400 W controls). kWh bill favors gas where fuel cheap; heat pump water heaters change math—see next section.

Operating cost: Gas therm + 0.3 kWh blower vs electric 9 kWh/day—region fuel prices decide; backup gen sizes electric tank fully, gas only blower/igniter.

Pilot light: Old gas standing pilot wastes gas but tiny electric; modern hot surface ignition ~0.1 kWh per fire.

Hybrid outage: Gas heat, electric blower still needs 120 V from gen.

Pilot light: Old gas standing pilot wastes gas but tiny electric; modern hot surface ignition ~0.1 kWh per fire.

Hybrid outage: Gas heat, electric blower still needs 120 V from gen.

Heat pump vs resistance water heater

Heat pump WH 500–1,500 W average with 2–3× COP vs 4,500 W resistance. Backup: still plan peak W during recovery.

COP 2.5: 1 kWh in → ~2.5 kWh heat into tank—recovery may take longer than 4,500 W resistance; peak W still 500–1,500 W during heat pump run.

Cooling side effect: HPWH dehumidifies/cools utility room—winter may raise room heat load slightly.

Noise: Fan 45–65 dB during recovery—locate away from bedrooms; W similar across brands at same gallon rating.

Cooling side effect: HPWH dehumidifies/cools utility room—winter may raise room heat load slightly.

Noise: Fan 45–65 dB during recovery—locate away from bedrooms; W similar across brands at same gallon rating.

Rural stack priority: (1) Sump if flooding risk. (2) Well for water. (3) Fridge. (4) Pool pump if health code requires circulation—else defer. (5) EV last. Pool heat and hot tub usually off on backup.

240 V planning: Well, dryer-class pool heat, tank water heater, and L2 EV all want 240 V—a 120 V-only 3,500 W generator cannot run them regardless of kWh math on paper.

Daily kWh sketch (suburban, illustrative): VS pool pump 5 kWh + fridge 2 kWh + well 1 kWh + tank WH 10 kWh = 18 kWh before EVEV +12–30 kWh dominates if charged at home. Backup plans usually shed EV and pool heat first, keep well + fridge + sump.

Log well pump starts with a clamp meter during a normal shower and laundry day—the worst second sets generator surge, not the average afternoon.

Worked example: pool + well home

VS pool pump: 400 W × 12 h = 4.8 kWh.

Well: 1,000 W × 0.5 h = 0.5 kWh.

Fridge: 2 kWh.

Day ≈ 7.3 kWh before EV.

Generator: well start 3,500 W + fridge 1,200 W4,700 W surge planning; 5,500–7,500 W class common.

FAQ

Pompa kolam dengan generator 2.000 W?

Surge often fails—need 3,500 W+ class.

VS pompa sepadan?

Yes for kWh; surge still matters on start.

Nah pompa beban cadangan terbesar?

Often yes in rural homes—LRA.

Mengisi daya EV pada genset?

Possible L2 only on large units—usually skip.

Bah selama pemadaman?

Critical—size with fridge overlap.

Pemanas kolam pompa panas cadangan?

Usually shed first—high kWh.

Darurat 120 V EV?

Trickle only—days to refill pack.

Listrik tanpa tangki WH?

Instant kW can exceed tank—read nameplate.

Bak mandi air panas sebagai cadangan?

Rare—5 kW+ sustained.

Treadmill dengan inverter?

1,000 W+ continuous headroom.

Tim WattSizing

Kami membangun alat netral vendor agar pemilik rumah, pembangun van, dan operator kecil dapat menentukan ukuran solar off-grid, bateri, dan cadangan tanpa tebak-tebakan. Panduan master menggabungkan rentang uji lapangan dengan daftar periksa praktis — selalu verifikasi dengan nameplate dan kode lokal.

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