Tankless water heater and appliance performance
jasperdog
10 years ago
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tyguy
10 years agoRelated Discussions
Tankless Water Heater
Comments (3)The on demand water heaters are pretty sophisticated appliances. Most have on board computers and require not only consistent, regulated water pressure, but the same for the fuel. The electric versions are not nearly as quick on the heating as the gas and LP versions. Sizing the unit for the home is important...complaints about inadequate supply are usually a sizing issue. The Rinnai is a good model and we have recently begun using the Eternal (from Texas) as it has a small storage tank for the installation of a hot water loop, allowing instant hot water at all faucets (doable in a crawl space, single story or new construction)....See MoreTankless hot water tank...never again.
Comments (284)It's funny that I just found this blog today. I don't agree with Mr. conecaster who's constantly singing praises about his on-demand water heater at all. Matter-of-fact, today I just got my new tank heater that I picked up yesterday into the basement. I friend is going to do the swap for me hopefully next week. The on-demand water heater sitting on my basement wall right now is a Bosch AquaStar Model GWH 2700 ES LP, that is it's powered by propane, installed in February 2009 by the builder of my house. It was supposedly a high-quality & premium on-demand unit. I paid extra for it, a lot extra (a tank heater would have been a no extra-cost item in the house build). It was installed by plumbers & gas technicians, everything done to code & per Bosch instructions etc. etc. Because I had been hearing for years about how great these on-demand water heaters are. It was never good, never mind great. But since I had heard all the stuff about these water heaters it must have just been me, right? Right from the start one had to turn taps to full hot & then play with the cold tap to adjust for correct temperature. I was NEVER able to set the water temperature to what I wanted while showering. I always had to play with the tap so the water was too cool & then it would get too hot....repeat. The tap that was really driving me nuts though, especially for the past year or so is the kitchen tap which is located almost exactly above the heater, the hot water line looks to be less that 10-feet long. That tap has a single handle so of course full hot would be selected as described. It would take about 5-minutes, timed more than once, to get warm & then hot. If washing a glass or dish I'd adjust the tap to comfortable-on-the-hands temperature, less than hot. After a few minutes, three or four, the water would start to get cold so I'd move the tap back to the full hot position.....the water would continue cooling, to ice cold temperature or watever the temp is at 295-feet deep, & stay like that for about four minutes before it would slowly start to warm up again until it got hot. If anyone doesn't think that's enough to drive one nuts look at your watch & time three minutes. Then put your hand under some running water & time that for three or four minutes....try five. Feels really long, doesn't it? The people at the local service provider, who used to be Bosch dealers, have been in my house about five times in the past three years & have done this & that to this thing. Whatever they suggested I did. A house call was $95 right off the bat, before 13% tax After an hour it was their hourly rate in 1/2 hour increments. I had the plumbing altered per their suggestion to install a backwash line. The unit was cleaned & heater lines "de-scaled" (in quotes since there was no scaling). Real long story shorter, I've spent a fair bit of hard-earned on this item. The builder has nothing to do with any of this since any new house warranty had long expired by the time I figured I was going to sort this out. Whan I went to the retailer that supplied the unit they just gave me Bosch's phone number & told me to call them myself (as in "shove off"). I won't bother describing that experience but you all can use your imaginations about trying to talk to a human at some outfit that's spent big bucks to try to make that as difficult as possible. I think it was my third time when I decided I better jump through all the hoops & do all the waiting in order to get help. Suffice to say they were no help at all, but I did get a customer number. No one carries Bosch around here any more. No one. I was considering another brand of these things, ones that required less flow to activate the heater since I thought that might be the problem, when I heard the strangest thing. Working overnight one time I was moaning about the water heater to my workmate, & mentioned about how these are so well-liked in Europe. My workmate was Dutch...... & he said that in Holland they don't use them any more. Apparently he had talked to his father who lives there & yes, he'd replaced his on-demand heater with a tank & most of his neighbours had as well & that on-demand heaters were kind of passe there. I don't know what the person that said that we're the last ones that still use tanks is talking about. After talking with a propane expert about the propane requirement difference between a tank heater & an on-demand heater I got another bit of information that got me thinking. And I don't believe that it's just a "Bosch" thing. I could be wrong but after crunching the numbers & determining BTU's consumed, to me it doesn't appear so. My wife suggested we just change to the brand of on-demand heater at Home Depot with their warranty etc. but I was having none of it. And for conecaster's advice? I'm done with throwing good money after bad. So I'm not going to be installing recirculating lines & buffer tanks or anything else to try & get this to work properly. After all wasn't simplicity one of the on-demand water heater's selling points? Think about it for three seconds. Right now I'm looking at my new tank heater sitting beside that on-demand unit & I get a really good feeling. Tank rupturing? You've got to be kidding me if you think I'm going to worry about that. To my mind that's a non-issue. Matter-of -fact the first I've heard of it is a few posts up, & I know tons of people that have tank water heaters....TONS. When I get that on-demand heater off my wall I'm going to try to get $10 for it on Kijiji. If no luck with that I'm going to use it for target practice. Sorry about the novella....See MoreTankless versus regular water heater
Comments (16)I am NOT a fan of tankless. It's a picky adjustment and the water does not stay hot long enough if I want or need one of those really long showers (+10Minutes). When I had my new old house I had to go through training sessions with my company on how to work the blasted thing. Do you currently have a 50 Gallon? It shouldn't matter how big the house is it's the demands (# of people and wash/dishwasher cycles) on the hot water heater. Sometimes switching shower times around will cure that issue or setting the timer to wash the dishes after you have gone to bed. Sometimes it's the fact that the water at it's hottest isn't quite hot enough. My plumber set my hot water heater to 110F. Plenty hot right? Nope. We had an issue with that because the amount of hot water we had to mix with the cold to be comfortable was so high it drained the tank's hot water quickly. I put it at 125F and all is well. When we go away for extended trips I turn it down to 90F. So that's what I would do first. Get a thermometer and check the temp of the water at it's furthest run. It will loose heat along the run particularly if you live in a cold area. Then go find the temp knob on the unit and adjust up 5 degrees at a time, test it a few days, then go from there. If you have a teen that lives in the shower nothing will help....See MoreTankless water heater?
Comments (3)The biggest issue with electric tankless is the amount of electricity that they need to use at one time. That often outstrips the home's existing electrical service and new service will need to be run. Ones that are big enough to handle whole home supply are generally over 100 amps. The average tanked electric heater is only 30 amps, because it can add a little bit of heat at a time that accumulates. Tankless needs to add a lot of heat all at once, thus the need for such a large service to supply them. If you have gas, gas is much easier to retrofit without affecting the need for new gas service. Well, some gas tankless can be anyway. It depends on your location and incoming winter water temperature how much rise you will need. Talk to a local plumber about the calculations and whether or not tankless is a viable alternative for you to traditional tanked....See Moredadoes
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