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Customers are often amazed at how well these units perform. They can melt ice that has already formed and will maintain a large opening in freezing conditions. It is our go-to trusted source for protecting our boats, docks, and marinas from winter's wrath and it can be used in freshwater or saltwater.
There are several ways that you can mount your de-icer based on your needs.
The most common way is to suspend it vertically, with the included mooring ropes, to create a circular de-icing pattern. You can also position the ropes to suspend the de-icer at an angle to create an elongated oval. This option is great for protecting piers and any other time you need a longer, but narrower pattern.
Additionally, you can also you a dock mount or a shallow water mount to position your ice eater. All of these mounting options give you the versatility to make it perform exactly as you need it to!
When a unit is in use it will draw between 2.6 Amps and 7 Amps for 115v. The P250 runs at 2.5 amps, the P500 and P750 run at 6 amps, and the P1000 runs at 7 amps. For 230v, the running amps will be 1/2 of what they are for 115v. In this case 1.3 amps for the P250, 3 amps for the P500 and P750, and 7 amps for the P1000.
Ice can damage docks in several ways and can affect different types of docks in different manners. The main problem overall is that when water freezes it expands which can cause extreme pressure on dock pilings and floats.
On lakes with floating docks, ice can form around a dock and hold it in place. Then if the water level drops, instead of the dock slowly lowering with the water level it will stay in place until the ice begins to thaw or the weight of the dock becomes too much for the ice. Then the entire dock could drop several feet at once. This can break and damage cables and also damage the entire structure of the dock, metal poles can be bent and roofs can collapse.
If your dock is made out of wood that can also be problematic in freezing conditions. Water will seep into the wood pilings and once the water begins to freeze it will expand and splinter off or even break the pilings. This can also cause the entire dock and roof to collapse or mangle.
Sometimes a dock can even survive and withstand its integrity in the ice, only to fail when the ice begins to thaw. That is when the dock can drop and land hard. Once the ice thaws and there are openings in the ice, your problems are not over. Docks can also be damaged by chunks of ice that the wind or current can blow into the dock. Floating ice can be every bit as damaging as ice freezing around a dock.
Sometimes docks will be covered by homeowners insurance but there can also be exclusions to what is covered and oftentimes ice and snow damage is not covered. Whether it is from ice expanding and damaging the dock or the weight of snow on the roof causing a collapse, dock damage is most likely NOT covered. Please check your homeowner's insurance to see where you stand.
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