Anonymous wrote:How would you empty it? It’s a ton of water.
But anyway, no.
Anonymous wrote:Why don’t you just buy a real commercial one and donate it to your community? Then you could use a real hot tub, that can be routinely cleaned and sanitized…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How would you empty it? It’s a ton of water.
But anyway, no.
It's outside, just pull the plug!
On an apartment balcony?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How would you empty it? It’s a ton of water.
But anyway, no.
It's outside, just pull the plug!
Anonymous wrote:How would you empty it? It’s a ton of water.
But anyway, no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't do it, although I haven't done any math. I just know from personal experience that condo/apartment construction tends to be shoddy. You wouldn't want to find that out the hard way when you're sitting in a hot tub some distance from the ground.
Thanks for the reply! Yeah I totally get that, but I think the construction if I were to put it inside is even worse, like 3/4 plywood floors to support that kind of weight some how concrete seems a little better than that. I trust the inside floors less but still not a great idea perhaps.
You're kidding right? PP says, it would probably be a bad idea to do this outside, and your response is, yeah, but that's better than inside. Dude, it's a bad idea. Full. Stop.
Oh a "full stop" idiot that missed the ops "but still not a great idea" sentice. Learn to read FULL STOP!!![]()