Randy in Maine
Well-known member
I will never go back to a tank water heater. I can run my little Baxi whole house boiler/water heater using my camping battery even when the power goes out. Takes up almost no space and very cost effective heat.
I have a tankless water heater. It's a big waste of money. A $3700 heater that replaces a $600 tank. To save $10 a month in natural gas, but waste $15 in water cause I have to run the water so much longer for it to heat up.

I have a tankless water heater. It's a big waste of money. A $3700 heater that replaces a $600 tank. To save $10 a month in natural gas, but waste $15 in water cause I have to run the water so much longer for it to heat up.
Just wait until it breaks and those regular maintenance cleanings.......then your really going to be unhappy
My electric tankless also takes for ever to get hot water to the distance faucets.
what heater did you pay $3700 for? a 199k 96% Rinnai (my opinion - the top of the line) is $1800 delivered.
how's that work? the issue there is pipe length, not the heater. I have a tank, and a single line that snakes around the whole house. takes a real 4 minutes to get hot water upstairs just running the sink. it's not the fault of the waterheater.
No point in keeping that big pot of water hot when its only going to be used occasionally.
How much do you think it costs per year to keep 30 gallons of water hot in a modern well-insulated tank water heater?
I replaced my tank LP heater at our lake house with an electric tankless. The first 18 months we owned it I replaced a few thermocouplers, the tank had to be drained every time we went down since the water would smell bad. Just wasnt worth the trouble. The electric rates are cheap and havent had an issue since.
I dont think I would put on in our main home though. I would like one of the point of use ones for the master tub, you cant get it but 50% full before running out of hot water.
Install one of these guys, and set your water heater up near its max temp. Problem solved! I did this when I installed a whirlpool tub. Worked perfect, and as a side benefit, the hot water was a perfectly consistent temp. No more temperature variation based on when the water heater last cycled (stacking effect).
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Cash-Ac...PIPHorizontal2_rr-_-203721329-_-206945096-_-N
My monthly cost for NG is about $25 for non-winter (april - november). If I go with tankless to potentially save $10/mo, it would take me 2-3yrs to recover the initial cost difference ($500, assume DIY for 3bd/3ba).
I would say yes!!!
about 40% of the bill - so if you use $9 a month for gas, that's not much. multiply that by a city of 60k people, and all of the sudden it's near a quarter mil/year.
per .gov:
https://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy15osti/63880.pdf
The average gas storage heater is <60% efficient - so 40% of the fuel burned doesn't contribute to providing hot water.
Haha I don't think he was using gas to run his electric hot water tanks. Those electric units pass on something like 99.x% of their energy to the hot water and typically have a UEF of between 92% (super cheap tank) and 95%. That means that you're losing between 7% and 4% of the energy to standby loss. That's not much at all.
With a traditional gas tank you do have a flu up the middle. I think that is what hurts standby efficiency. Step out of traditional to this:
20 gallon gas water tank heater with modulating 50k/100k BTU burner. Burner is up to 95% efficient and UEF is .87. A small well-insulated tank keeps the standby losses down and the 50/100k BTU heat exchanger can run a shower forever (and multiple showers for a while) and it needs no annual descaling maintenance. You get the best of both worlds: immediate low flow hot water, no annual maintenance, very competitive efficiency, cheap fuel source, less complexity than a tankless, can run a hot shower indefinitely (and multiple showers for quite a while), compact size, stainless steel tank and heat exchanger, and 20 gallons of hot water if the power goes out. It also comes with a pre-installed mixing valve so you can keep the 20 gallons at up to 167*F and still have an output temp set to your liking (usually 120-140*F.)
http://westinghousewaterheating.com/residential-gas-floor-hybrid.html
Seriously. We need to see more companies making these. This Westinghouse is a rebranded HTP unit. I have one sitting in my garage right now. I can't wait to put it in!
That was an interesting read. If only the people that built homes/buildings cared about this stuff.![]()
new tank water heater: $500How much does it cost ?.........Almost 100 posts the topic time to revisit the math again:
If you save $4.00 per month. 40% of the $10 gas bill.
Tankless install is $2000 it takes 500 months to break even or 41 years.
If the install is simple with no gas line and meter upgrades and you get by for $1000 up charge then the payback is 250 months 20.8 years.
There are posts where the tankless install are $2500 to $3500.
Then there is the pesky maintenance issues.
mixing valves are a great idea for any water heater - even if you don't tweak the heater super hot. keeps kids from getting burned.Install one of these guys, and set your water heater up near its max temp. Problem solved! I did this when I installed a whirlpool tub. Worked perfect, and as a side benefit, the hot water was a perfectly consistent temp. No more temperature variation based on when the water heater last cycled (stacking effect).
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Cash-Ac...PIPHorizontal2_rr-_-203721329-_-206945096-_-N
Now that we have concluded filling the tub is priceless ...........and some purchase decisions are not related to price or payback ............irrational purchases should be more fun than a tankless heater like:
Buying $125k RV to ............save money on hotels
Buying a $30k motorcycle to .............save money on gas.
Buying $50k bass boat to...........................save money on fish at Sam’s club
Saving the planet by buying a Tesla for $60k.............telling the wife we are going to save so much on gasoline..........when we really just wanted a new coolest car on the market and becoming a member of the Tesla club.
That's one big water heater...six feet square?
I have a Bosch Aquastar 125B that does not reduce volume. So do all of the new tankless reduce volume to meet temp or do only certain ones?I will use Rinnai as I know them best having represented them in one way or another for 27 yrs. That since 4/1 is over and I have no affiliation with them any longer. I do love their products. I have an RL-75LP in my home. It will max at 180,000 btu input at 82%. At a 70* temp rise, so from 50-120* that unit will absolutely reliably deliver 4.3 gpm of 120* water. If your supply water drops 10* that RL-75 will deliver .4gpm less or 3.9gpm. If the water warms 10* to 60* supply the unit will deliver 4.7 gpm.
You should be able to find the specs on your unit and be able to see exactly what is going on with your water heater. You can read the gpm outlet to .1gpm and see the actual temp rise. The best tankless guarantee temp delivery at the expense of pressure. If your tub can deliver 10 gpm due to its piping, your tankless may...will...reduce the flow to guarantee delivery temp (see above). There may be another issue, depending upon the manufacturer of your unit. Whose is it?
I have a Bosch Aquastar 125B that does not reduce volume. So do all of the new tankless reduce volume to meet temp or do only certain ones?
what do you mean by does not reduce volume?
volume is determined by how far you have the hot water valve at the faucet open, not the water heater. if the water heater can keep up with the BTU requirement of a given flow, then you get water at the setpoint. if not, it's colder.
if it didn't reduce the volume of gas being burned to match, it would eventually boil water and explode (or pop the T&P valve).
i wonder how that would work in practice.He is meaning the opposite - IE when the demand for hot water surpasses the BTU capacity, it will restrict and slow down the flow of water so that it leaves the heater at the setpoint. Basically if you had that, combined with temperature compensating shower valves, you could run more appliances/showers, and the temperature wouldn't drop, the flow would just reduce.
what do you recommend for a high efficiency, sealed combustion water heater?Hey guys I'm a hot water specialist, I don't like tankless units, more things to go wrong ,parts if not stocked , have no hot water tell parts arrive.. water quality is a factor , most tankless manifcturers require water filter, for warranty . Deliming the units periodically. Have to wait for hot water,units are often relocated to different location,reason for waiting.. people are thinking they are the greatest.
If you don't need the current space where w\h is located, keep the tank type W\h I prefer them. But it's your choice your home..
That's what I have to say about that..
I didn't know some tankless were only on or off. My old one regulates BTU based on water volume so I adjust it every fall and spring. Also, you need at least 1/2 gal/minute to activate on low flame.
I thought the new ones had electronic sensors and based BTU on temperature.
Hey guys I'm a hot water specialist, I don't like tankless units, more things to go wrong ,parts if not stocked , have no hot water tell parts arrive.. water quality is a factor , most tankless manifcturers require water filter, for warranty . Deliming the units periodically. Have to wait for hot water,units are often relocated to different location,reason for waiting.. people are thinking they are the greatest.
If you don't need the current space where w\h is located, keep the tank type W\h I prefer them. But it's your choice your home..
That's what I have to say about that..