Sierra Pool & Spa Repair

Sierra Pool & Spa Repair Swimming Pool, Spa and Hot Tub Repair Specialist Specializing in swimming pool, spa and hot tub repairs and equipment replacement and upgrades.

Springfield, Branson Missouri area.

03/04/2025

Swimming pool season begins April 1, 2025. Sierra Pool & Spa Repair is ready to serve you.
Along with swimming pool season, comes the spring spa & hot tub season. We are ready and equipped to serve your spa and hot tub needs.

Celebrating 40 years
03/04/2025

Celebrating 40 years

12/21/2024

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all of our wonderful clients! We at Sierra Pool & Spa Repair, greatly appreciate you and your trust in us for your Swimming pool & hot tub needs.

*** Counterfeit Alert!!! *** We just received this letter from King Technology, the makers of the  Frog@Ease hot tub san...
04/01/2022

*** Counterfeit Alert!!! *** We just received this letter from King Technology, the makers of the Frog@Ease hot tub sanitizer systems. We are seeing more counterfeit items sold online, even through Amazon. This needs to be another reminder, to purchase your swimming pool & hot tub products direct from your swimming pool & hot tub dealer and service company. We buy our products direct from our distributers who purchase direct from the manufacturer, assuring that you are not receiving counterfeit and inferior products.

To our valued Dealers and Distributors,

From our beginning, FROG® products have always been made with integrity, and FROG has earned a strong reputation of offering high quality products that people can rely and depend upon.

Recently, approximately 20 of our consumers contacted us because the products they purchased did not live up to what they have grown to enjoy and expect.

We immediately launched a thorough investigation and uncovered counterfeit versions of two FROG products. These products were purchased on Amazon.com and include the FROG ®SmartChlor® Cartridge replacement 3 pack and the FROG Serene® Mineral Cartridge.

Our attorneys reached out to the General Counsel for Amazon, they responded immediately and connected us to their Amazon Counterfeit Crimes Unit.

We are making good progress toward resolving this issue. In addition, we have reported the counterfeiting to several federal agencies, including the EPA, Customs and Border Protection, and the Postal Inspection Service. Our goal is to get the counterfeit sellers permanently shut down, the products pulled from Amazon and to prosecute to the fullest extent of the law.

Please know that this counterfeit situation is exclusive to an Amazon seller. All the product you have received and will receive from King Technology continues to be the highest quality you and your consumers have come to expect and reply upon.

King Technology has always adamantly protected its’ intellectual property so that we can continue to serve you, our channel partners, with the highest quality and value that you can count on.

Our vision at King Technology is to Enrich Lives Daily. We take that seriously and live it out daily. Please know that we are fully committed to resolve this issue and prevent it from happening in the future.

03/28/2021

Swimming pool season begins this Thursday April 1, 2021. Sierra Pool & Spa Repair is ready to serve you.
Along with swimming pool season, comes the spring spa & hot tub season. We are ready and equipped to serve your spa and hot tub needs.

03/06/2021

Spring is around the corner and swimming pool opening season will officially begin April 1, 2021.
We are currently working on the opening schedule. If you are a regular pool opening client, we will contact you to schedule, as soon as it is complete.

02/15/2021

Have you ever wondered where the word Spa comes from?

Most experts agree that the word originated in the Belgian town of Spa, which has been famous for its thermal baths with healing powers since antiquity. It was frequented and lauded by the nobility, who eventually passed on its name to all similar establishments.
Alternative theories suggest that the word SPA is an acronym of the Latin phrase Salus/Sanum per aquam or Sanitas per aquam, which translates as “health through water”. Many historians argue that it was originally coined in the Roman Empire and that it has been found inscribed on the walls of ancient Roman baths. The term could also have come from the Latin espargere, which means to pour or sprinkle.

What does the word SPA really mean?

SPA is the name of a Belgian thermal town and it seems this name comes from the Latin acronym Salus Per Aquam, which means health (preserved and gained) through water. This naturally lead thermal centers to be the SPAs par excellence as thermal water has a therapeutic effect and revitalizes the body and mind..
We have proof of the human use of thermal pools dating the Bronze Age and many ancient populations, as the Egyptians, the Arabs and the Chinese, used thermal water to heal several pathologies and for wellness purposes. Ancient Romans knew about the healthy effects of thermal water and were sincerely fascinated by the Thermae: many of the ancient Roman cities would have public baths where they used to relax, take care of their own wellness, socialize and even carry out business.
Among the many thermal locations loved by the Ancient Romans, we find Terme Euganee, the iperthermal hot spring water pools’ area. During the Augustus Age, luxurious thermal buildings were built in the area right beneath the Euganean Hills: here the imperial nobles used to come on vacation to take care of themselves among the hot and cold baths. Trace of the Ancient Roman presence among Abano and Montegrotto is visible not only among the archeological excavations but also thanks to the use we still make of iperthermal water for wellness purposes.

It's Hot Tub Season! As the evenings begin to cool off, it's a great time to sit and enjoy the hot tub. If your hot tub ...
10/15/2020

It's Hot Tub Season! As the evenings begin to cool off, it's a great time to sit and enjoy the hot tub. If your hot tub needs a good flush & cleaning or it hasn't worked in a while, this is a great time to have Sierra Pool & Spa Repair come out and give it a good check up service.
Sierra Pool & Spa Repair is now offering a newer sanitizing system for your hot tub. This new system works better at sanitizing than any other system we have ever tested and used in a hot tub. You can read about this on our web site under Hot Topics, Latest News "Spa & Hot Tub Water Issues - The Cyanuric Acid Debate". Contact us today, by calling or filling out a Contact Form or Service Request on our web site and inquire about this new sanitizing system.

Pool Repair, Spa Repair & Hot Tub Repair

Check out our new post on spa & hot tub water issues.
09/04/2020

Check out our new post on spa & hot tub water issues.

Are you having Spa & Hot Tub Water Issues? Maybe your chlorine sanitizer contains cyanuric acid (CYA). Learn more ...

The Cyanuric Acid Debate? Not for Hot TubsWhile the swimming pool trade continues to debate the pros and cons of cyanuri...
09/03/2020

The Cyanuric Acid Debate? Not for Hot Tubs

While the swimming pool trade continues to debate the pros and cons of cyanuric acid (CYA) for swimming pools, there are a number of studies including a conclusion from the CDC that CYA has no place in a hot tub. Yet many hot tub owners are using chlorine containing cyanuric acid. The result is a buildup of CYA that results in premature draining and refilling, which makes owning a hot tub harder than it should be.

What Is CYA And Why Is It Used?

CYA (cyanuric acid, also known as conditioner or stabilizer) is a chemical that was first introduced into the swimming pool industry in 1956. Back then, pools were commonly chlorinated with liquid chlorine like sodium hypochlorite or calcium hypochlorite that came in a powdered form. The problem is that chlorine is subject to degradation by the UV rays of the sun and therefore needs to be added once or even twice a day. The loss of chlorine in water to sunlight is 75% in two hours, or a complete loss in four hours.

CYA keeps the chlorine in the water up to eight times longer. Pools that used to need daily chlorine additions now only need chlorine once a week with CYA. However, chlorine in the water quickly binds to CYA and a smaller portion of the chlorine is available. So, the chlorine is around longer, but it does not kill as quickly. And as the CYA increases, there is less and less chlorine available for killing bacteria and microorganisms.

Innovative chlorine manufacturers in the late 1950s started combining chlorine with CYA to make chlorinated isocyanurates called dichlor and trichlor. Trichlor tablets quickly became the most popular chlorinating product for pools.

CYA Buildup Is Real

While trichlor is still a popular choice for chlorinating swimming pools, most hot tubs are chlorinated with dichlor. Dichlor is about 50% CYA. This means that for each 10 ppm of chlorine added to the water from dichlor, the CYA increase is 9 ppm.

In other words, a 300-gallon hot tub adding 1 1/2 teaspoons of dichlor four times a week can build up a CYA level of 50 ppm in as few as four weeks and reach 100 ppm CYA in only seven weeks. Another way to look at it is that each person per hour in the hot tub will consume 4 grams of pure chlorine or 8 grams of dichlor, which is 3.5 ppm of chlorine in a 300-gallon hot tub. Bottom line is that two people using the hot tub two times a week will consume 14 ppm chlorine and increase the CYA by 12.6 ppm per week. More times of use or more people would require more chlorine and have a larger increase in CYA.

CYA Slows Down Kill Times

The kill time (CT value) for pseudomonas aeruginosa, which is the organism associated with hot tub rash or itch, with no CYA is about 20 seconds. It is 1 minute and 30 seconds with 50 ppm CYA and nearly 2 minutes with 100 ppm CYA. As CYA increases the effectiveness of the chlorine decreases. To achieve the same kill time would require a much greater chlorine level in the water. So, as the CYA increases, you need to make a corresponding increase in the free chlorine level. This makes the free chlorine level a moving target.

CYA buildup and the increase in kill times has led the CDC to issue this statement: "The CDC recommends not using cyanuric acid or chlorine products with cyanuric acid in hot tubs/spas." This was published in May 2016 in a CDC article called "Your Disinfection Team: Chlorine & pH."

The Pennsylvania Department of Health in December 2016 published a statement: "At even moderate levels of cyanuric acid, the amount of time it takes chlorine to kill pseudomonas aeruginosa (the bacteria that causes hot tub itch) can be as much as 100 times as long as in a hot tub or spa without cyanuric acid." This appeared in the publication "Public Swimming and Bathing Places: Operational and Biological Protocol Recommendations."

Other Ramifications

High levels of CYA have also been known to cause corrosion because it is part of the total alkalinity of the water. When working with the Langelier Saturation Index on balancing water, you have to account for the CYA level. To do that, you subtract about 1/3 of the CYA reading from the total alkalinity reading. The result is your TA may be lower than you think, which could result in corrosive water that is damaging to surfaces and unpleasant to soak in.

Problems Arise

The result of CYA buildup in hot tubs is a myriad of negative effects that no hot tub owner wants to experience. Those include cloudy water, bad smelling water, skin irritations and worse. When disgruntled customers look for answers, they are told to add more chlorine to "shock the tub," which only compounds the problem by adding even more CYA. After as little as two months, there is no way for chlorine to recover. Owners are forced to empty their spas prematurely, which leads to frustration and the perception that owning a hot tub is difficult.

Warnings Not Working

Even though the CDC and other scientifi c evidence says CYA should not be used in hot tubs, most hot tub owners use chlorine. According to PK Data in the APSP 2018 Yearbook, 60% of all hot tubs are sanitized with chlorine, and the chlorine most often used and recommended is dichlor.

Dichlor by Another Name

Dichlor is listed on its container labeling as sodium dichloro-striazinetrione with the added designator of either dihydrate or anhydrous. However, dichlor is also known as sodium dichloro isocyanurate, which clearly calls out the cyanuric acid content of this formula. All disinfectants for hot tubs must be approved by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and they must state the exact chemical ingredients and percentages on the label.

The Only Conclusion

With no need for UV protection, CYA should not be in hot tubs. It causes problems with killing microorganisms by slowing down chlorine's kill times, which could potentially produce unsafe water. It could lead to corrosion or staining, but more importantly, it makes taking care of hot tub water much harder than it needs to be.

Fortunately, there's a way hot tub owners can avoid all of these issues. Sierra Pool & Spa Repair offers the only self-regulating chlorine sanitizer with 0% CYA. Users love it because there is no measuring, and it consistently delivers crystal clear water that smells and feels great. Together with minerals, it creates Fresh Mineral Water that kills bacteria two ways: by helping to maintain water balance and conditioning the water for softness. With 75% less chlorine and shocking only once a month with a non-chlorine shock, hot tub owners find it incredibly easy to own a hot tub, and the water stays cleaner longer.

To learn more, visit our web site at SierraPoolSpaRepair.com and fill out our contact form or Call 417-890-7700

Contact Sierra Pool & Spa Repair, to get setup on a new and amazing way of maintaining your hot tub, without the negative effects of Cyanuric Acid (CYA).

08/17/2020

Swimming pool closing season will begin in September. We are working on the schedule, and we will be contacting all of our customers, to schedule your pool closing within the next 2 weeks. Thank you, to all of our customers, for another successful swimming pool season.

Our latest review, left by one of our satisfied customers.
05/03/2020

Our latest review, left by one of our satisfied customers.

★★★★★ Ron and his Son showed up promptly Tuesday morning 4/28/2020 at 8am. They were converting us from freshwater to saltwater. We got all new equipment and plumbing. They even replaced the sand in our Sand Filter. Both were here until around 3pm. I was really impressed with the fine deta...

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Ozark, MO
65721

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Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

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