Something in the world of floating have you stumped?
Show Highlights
As it turns out, there’s no certification program to running a float center. You buy these big expensive machines that require constant, technical maintenance and you’re on your own for how to accomplish that. There aren’t float tank repair persons that you can call (yet) and just have them show up and do it for you, so making sure you’re knowledgeable and prepared for this maintenance is a really good idea.
Graham and Ashkahn lay out the Float On best practices for how to plan for maintenance so that it’s the least disruptive for your center if something goes wrong.
Listen to Just the Audio
Transcription of this episode… (in case you prefer reading)
Graham: Today’s question for you is, “We want to do some tank maintenance, but we’re worried we’re going to mess everything up.”
Yeah, that’ll do you.
“Should we take things apart just to do it, or should we go with the old adage of, if it ain’t broke don’t fix it?”
Ashkahn: Alright, that’s very general. I wish I knew a little bit more specifics about what they were talking about, but you know. You can’t let fear hold you back! I mean, that’s my general answer.
Graham: Yeah, and there’s just some maintenance that needs to be done, you know?
Ashkahn: So you can’t-
Graham: You can’t wait for things to break either.
Ashkahn: Yeah, the solution shouldn’t be “just don’t touch anything and avert your eyes and pretend like everything’s fine.” So yeah, you should probably do the maintenance you think is important that you should be doing.
Graham: Yeah, and the fact that it’s called “maintenance” and not like, just abstract upgrades, or you know, “I have this sick idea to pimp out my float tank.” Like, should I leave well enough alone-
Ashkahn: Unnecessary labor.
Graham: Yeah, yeah. But you know, things like, yeah, actually … like we talked about during a different episode … draining your tank, and cleaning it out on the inside and refilling it every so often, making sure to get the inside of the pipes. Things like changing your impeller, changing UV bulbs.
Ashkahn: Cleaning the impeller.
Graham: Whoa, did I say changing the impeller?
Ashkahn: Yeah. You don’t need a new impeller, but-
Graham: Cleaning the impeller, getting all the hair out of there. And all of that is regular maintenance that does feel a little intense when you’re doing it for the first time, like actually taking apart your pump, and breaking spindles in the middle of the night, and stuff like that. You know.
Ashkahn: So here’s the deal. Here’s the deal, is when you-
Graham: Break it down for us, Ashkahn!
Ashkahn: Break it down here! When you’re doing maintenance, I think there’s two things that I like to keep as general rules that make all of this go a little bit easier. One of them is to only do one thing at a time. If you have to like change the UV bulbs on all five of your float tanks, or something, do one UV bulb per week. Don’t just spend one day being like, “I’m just gonna do all five tanks at once,” because you know when you do stuff like this, there is a pretty decent chance you’re gonna mess something up.
And even if you don’t mess anything up, like you put it all back together, and it’s just kind of leaking all of a sudden. And there’s just stuff like that happens, like way more than you would want or think that it would. And sometimes it’s to the point that your float tank is kind of down. You’re gonna need to spend a few days fixing it.
So, only doing one thing at a time allows it so that, one you have time to deal with stuff when it goes wrong, and also, if, in the worst case scenario, something happens to some point that you do actually have to cancel floats for that next day or two days or something, if you just have one float tank down that’s a lot easier than having all of your float tanks down all of a sudden. You may be able to scoot appointments around to the point where you don’t even actually have to call and cancel on anyone, if you’ve just got one float tank down.
So that’s usually what we like to do. We never took on more than one maintenance task like that for our float tanks per week. And the other thing that is a really nice rule to kind of keep is basically, usually this maintenance has, there’s a certain amount of pieces in whatever machinery you’re taking apart that are really easy to break. So like when you’re replacing UV bulbs, the glass tube around the UV bulb, the court sleave, or the bulb itself, or basically giant long pieces of thin glass, those are easy to break. In pumps, there’s usually like a little porcelain spindle kind of holding the impeller in place. That thing’s really easy to break.
Graham: Really easy to break, yeah.
Ashkahn: See, we’ve broken so many of them! So, I kind of have it as a rule that we do not ever open anything. A pump, a UV light, we don’t unscrew or start messing with anything, unless I have spares of those fragile pieces already on hand. Because the spares are usually pretty cheap, you know, those spindles cost like ten dollars. But not having one and breaking one means it’s three days, or four days before you’re gonna have to get that emergency shipped to you, and that’s just like three or four days that your float tank is down.
So that can be a really big difference in how screwed you are when you break something. So, those are kind of main things, don’t do more than one thing a day, and if you ever touch anything, make sure you already have spares of the fragile parts available to you.
Graham: Yeah, and if you’re really nervous, or it’s expensive machinery that you’re talking about here, like actually doing maintenance on your UV system, or doing maintenance on your pump, it doesn’t hurt to look online for the manual, to check in with the manufacturer. They have technical departments that you can talk to and make sure that you’re doing things right. Like taking apart your pump, you actually need a calibrated torque wrench, where you can like exactly know how many pounds of pressure that you’re putting into-
Ashkahn: Sometimes, sometimes. Not all times.
Graham: Yes, okay, fine. Some pumps you need that, right? And if you don’t know which pump they are, it can cause problems.
Ashkahn: That’s true, yeah, you can tighten things and it’ll like warp the-
Graham: The actual pump housing. And that, you need an entire spare pump to fix. So don’t be afraid to reach out for help and guidance, too, again both from manuals, and from technical departments.
Ashkahn: And you’re really gonna be surprised how few parts are inside of these pieces of equipment, than you think. Like the first time I took a pump apart I was like, “Oh boy!” And I opened it, and I’m like, “Wait, there’s three pieces in here? That’s it?”
And like a UV light, a lot of people’s UV lights, those kind of Delta UV ones and stuff, if you open up those, it’s literally just a tube. There’s like a glass tube and a light bulb in it, and the rest is just a big, open, empty, hollow cylinder. Like so you know, it’s nice. It’s nice to like understand what these things are and how they work, and that way, in the future, if you notice something is having a problem, you probably have a better chance of kind of understanding what’s going on, and understanding if it’s important or if it can wait. Getting comfortable with your equipment is really useful.
Graham: Yep, and the first time that you change your UV sheaths and bulb, just plan on having like two backups or something like, those are often the easiest things to break. I think in our shop, that’s like the biggest kind of serious maintenance thing that has gone wrong, yeah, just over and over again.
Ashkahn: Broken a lot of spindles, too! Yeah, and separate the UV thing. If you’re worried about breaking glass, you don’t want it to be connected to the rest of your float tank system, so if you do break something you can like totally flush it out and clean it without any concern of any glass getting into your float tank.
Graham: Yeah, that.
Ashkahn: I mean yeah, we can … If we had more specific idea of what-
Graham: Maintenance-
Ashkahn: What you’re trying to do, we could give a more specific answer, but in general, that’s it. Like do it, it’s probably not gonna be quite as crazy as you think, but make sure you’re going into it-
Graham: Plan for the worst.
Ashkahn: -prepared. Yeah, yeah. Make sure the worst case scenario is not gonna totally screw you over and bring all your float tanks down.
Graham: And don’t wait for something to break. I mean, doing regular maintenance is absolutely the way to extend the life of your float tanks, and pay the least amount of money, and stuff like that.
Ashkahn: And it’s good, what we do at our shop is we take all this bigger routine maintenance and we just, we schedule it out across a year. So we’ll use like our Helm software with these task generators, and set these things to show up, like these tasks, to pop up one week apart. So, we’ll go through six weeks of clean the impeller in room one, and then clean the impeller in room two, and then clean the impeller in room three, and then six weeks of changing our UV bulbs, and then six weeks of draining and filling our tanks one tank at a time.
And as we do, you know … and there’s enough stuff like, that to kind of like every week, there’s one big task that needs to be done. And so if you, yeah, you can actually sit down and kind of plan out like your year of maintenance.
Graham: Cool, and if you have anymore questions for us, head on over to floattanksolutions.com/podcast.
Recent Podcast Episodes
Being the First Float Center – DSP 320
What’s it like to be the first float center to open in an area? How do you handle it?
Graham and Ashkahn explain what it was like opening Float On, being one of the first dedicated float centers in the United States. The exciting thing is that creating awareness is really fun, but it can be a little stressful since your float center will represent floating as a practice for people.
Many of the tips here are the same for anyone opening a center: focus on awareness, be prepared to educate, and make sure your floats are the best they can be.
Are Light or Dark Colored Float Rooms better? – DSP 319
Is it better to have a light colored room that hides salt, or a dark colored room that easily shows it?
Graham and Ashkahn dish out some strong opinions on this idea, especially the idea that dark colored rooms and tanks are good for maintaining employee accountability.
What you Need to Know About Algorithms – DSP 318
Ashkahn and Derek talk about algorithms, those pesky bits of code that push your posts up or down on social media and search engines and leave you scrambling for ways to get likes and clicks, constantly mixing it up to just be seen.
The duo discusses how algorithms affect everyday posts for small businesses and how to keep up on information about the constantly changing nature of these systems. The main takeaway is, if your content is fresh, non-repetitive and you aren’t trying to game the system, you likely have nothing to worry about.
Commissions for Memberships? – DSP 317
Any sales related business knows that commissions are the gold-standard incentive program for drumming up business, but how does it work in a float center for memberships?
Derek and Ashkahn talk about the mixed success they’ve experienced at Float On each time it’s been tried.
Getting Members to Float More Often – DSP 316
Single float memberships have become increasingly more common in the float industry, typically with the option to purchase additional floats for the month at a discount. But how do you properly incentivize those members to float more than a single time per month?
Ashkahn and Derek talk marketing tips to keeping your float center top of mind and making sure your members are active regularly.
Latest Blog Posts
How Many Float Tanks Should I Have?
Intro If you’ve crossed over into the sacred realm of “Yeah, I’m pretty sure I’m gonna open up a float center,” an obvious question arises — “How many tanks should I have?” Now, if you’re like me, you’re creating a 90 tank float community where everyone who buys in...
The Construction Secret to Soundproofing: Storage Between Float Rooms
If you’ve ever taken a look at our construction materials or gotten advice on soundproofing, you’ve probably heard of the importance of including “air gaps” when building out your center. What that means and why it helps can be a bit of a technical question, and the practical implementation can seem daunting and unreasonable.
Float Conference 2017 Recap
Now that the salt has settled, I’m sharing some thoughts from “The Great Gathering of People Who Really Love Being Alone Sometimes in a Dark, Briny Room,” also known as The Float Conference.
The conference has always been an amazing opportunity to connect with the pulse of the broader float industry and, if this year’s gathering showed us anything, it’s that our collective heartbeat is as strong as ever.
2017 Float Conference Program Introduction
Every year, I have the great pleasure of writing the introduction for the Float Conference program, and every year we share it on our blog so that members of the industry who weren’t able to make the journey out to Portland are able to check it out. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it.
From all of us at Float Tank Solutions, where our time is measured as the space between two conferences, thank you again for a wonderful year!
– Graham Talley