Other controllers lack the features of a more sophisticated controller. They :
- Do not stop and warn when the battery voltage is too low and further use will permanently damage your battery and cause added expense
- Do not give battery voltage at the flick of a button
- Do not control as efficiently as a our controller, which makes your battery power go further! (They lose energy mostly through heat)
- Do not work at the most efficient frequency for the pump (meaning the pump loses yet more energy through heat and noise)
- Cannot provide added benefits and features, like TDS, hot water system control, radio control, tank filling and water production control
An analogue voltage regulator is massively less efficient than a professional controller. This is because in dropping the voltage across the voltage regulator the change in voltage generates a huge amount of wasted energy in heat. If dropping the voltage from 12V to 6V (half speed) at 6A, this is 36W lost in heat across the regulator. The loss here is 3A potentially do this for an hour and this is 3Ahr you are using for no pump action!"
Put another way if you are running a 75Ahr battery with a pump taking 6A, then this in theory means you are losing one third of your battery power and working time in heat! So instead of working for a theoretical maximum of 12.5 hrs your can only work for 8.33 hrs. In practice it can turn out to be a lower working time as we know, but the affect is the same. So with our controller you may get 6 hrs of work, but with an equivalent cheap controller you will probably get only 4 hours of work. And you may end up damaging your battery in the process.
The other problem is that heat is the enemy of all electronic products. It shortens the product life and in the worst case can cause a fire risk. Our controllers are designed to run as cool and efficiently as possible, saving energy, increasing run time, increasing the product life.
Some other controllers while being lower cost are, low efficiency, potential fire hazard, burning battery energy for very little gain. While a cheap voltage regulator is a solution. This is still a pump controller, but just not a very sophisticated one and will not suit some.