Any thoughts on these? Takes a while for hot water to get to taps.
Auto correct sux.

I put these in for customers all the time and they love them. No need to run a dedicated return line.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000E78XHG/?tag=atomicindus08-20
Help me out here...I always thought that you need to have a return line for something like this. How does the water loop back to the heater?
When the pump turns on, it draws water out of the hot water line and pumps it into the cold water line. The cold water line then refills the water heater tank and this continues until the hot water line reaches a temperature set point where the pump shuts off. The draw of the hot water line and pumping into the cold water side happens simultaneously and water pressure is maintained so no water is drawn from the city/well water supply.Help me out here...I always thought that you need to have a return line for something like this. How does the water loop back to the heater?
You install a sensor valve at the furthest fixture from the water heater. (Under a sink is easiest) and it uses the cold line for the return. Here is a PDF of the brochure that explains it well.
https://www.watts.com/dfsmedia/0533dbba17714b1ab581ab07a4cbb521/29556-source/PF-IHWRS.pdf
this looks like a good solution for a friend who has this problem in his new home.I put these in for customers all the time and they love them. No need to run a dedicated return line.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000E78XHG/?tag=atomicindus08-20
It's gonna depend on your use case. I wouldn't want a re-circ system with an instant-on propane/NG/Electric water heater. I'd want a push-button recirc system.
Adding additional units ? Not sure that makes any sense ?
NAT GAS water heating is literally dirt cheap .........why would you want to add electric hot water devices in any shape or form ? If it’s an all electric home, guess it makes no difference where the energy is consumed.
If you have NAT GAS in the home .........Some sort of recirculation system is simple and affordable way to address the distant faucets.
What’s DIRT cheap ? my NAT GAS cost to heat water with a conventional 50 gal. tank is less than $10/month. That $10 also runs the dryer and gas cook top.
I'm not sure where you live, but I would not call my natural gas water heating dirt cheap. And there is the heat loss to the environment of having my copper pipes hot all of the time from the circulating system. I lose very little heat from the tiny tank underneath the sinks. And in my case, adding the two tanks was simpler than trying to get some sort of recirculation system set up. To each their own.
That's what I thought at first. Fortunately, we put the extra lines in and could just pop in the pump after the fact...
It's all about the run from the heater to the faucets. We have a string of faucets fed by a 1" water line and it takes FOREVER for hot water to get to the last faucet on the chain. Even if we had a push button system, we'd be waiting for an eternity.
I put these in for customers all the time and they love them. No need to run a dedicated return line.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000E78XHG/?tag=atomicindus08-20
I put these in for customers all the time and they love them. No need to run a dedicated return line.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000E78XHG/?tag=atomicindus08-20
So with a system like this, you would end up with "warm" water in your cold water lines, correct? Because it's circulating the previously heated water back to the water heater. You would then have to wait for cold water to get to the faucet (drink of water, brushing teeth)
Our master bathroom is on the far end of the house too. Would be nice to have at least a little warm water for washing hands. I have toyed with installing a small point of use heater under the sink, but not sure if that's worth the effort either?
Is this an option for you? It requires plumbing a new set of lines in the walls and also insulating the pipes. (If you don't insulate, your costs will go way up to operate the system.)
If you have the opportunity to do that, it's a great luxury. You can create a passive system that uses gravity to do a slow re-circulation, or you can put in a re-circulating pump with a timer. (IMO - The timer is a necessity to make operation of the pump systems somewhat economical.)
I put these in for customers all the time and they love them. No need to run a dedicated return line.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000E78XHG/?tag=atomicindus08-20
Anyone recommend a push-button-on recirc system? Don't want a timer.
