Anyone have any experience with them? In recent years, the selection has really grown, and prices are dropping
We have a single combined tankless Navien boiler that provides hot water to our house (3 baths and 2 half baths) and also 2000 sq foot of radiant heat. It works great and we have no major complaints.
How does a hot water circulation pump work with a tank less?
Spec calls circulation pump on hot circuits, maybe not on tank less?
And if not, it's three gallons of cold water before our lines clear out the lines....
This shouldn't affect your shop, but I'm interested in how it works in a large house... Multiple points to use tank less?
It works just fine, but I think its essential for a large house. We have 5000 sq feet and put in the recirculating lines "just in case" we needed to add a pump. We figured out pretty quickly that we wanted it. Fortunately, we were able to just pop the pump in without needing to add any plumbing.
We put our unit in the middle of the house with the expectation that it would speed up the flow everywhere. In theory, that would have been fine, but our plumbers put in a lot of 1" copper through the house to combat pressure drops so, we end up having to move a lot of water to some areas to get things to heat up. The recirculating pump will save us a lot of energy in this regard.
I say "will", because it's still a work in progress. This thread is spot-on with regard to the approach for a recirculating pump with these systems:
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=280892&highlight=tankless BTW - We found that the way to go is with an adjustable thermostat recirculating pump and NOT the a variable speed model! (We had a challenge finding good resources on the topic other than how to hook these up, so we had to do some experimentation...)
Some sort of remote control is needed for the recirculating pump and is the most elegant and energy-efficient solution for a large space. My wife ran the pump 24/7 for a few weeks (not thinking...) and we burned through $40 of gas and electricity for the exercise. All the hot pipes also acted as a radiator and raised the temperature of the house by 4 degrees! We have a lamp timer on the pump now so we have fast hot water in the morning and at night. This works well, but we can be more efficient. I think we may put in some remote control timers with a home automation system so we can command the water to circulate and pre-heat as we get ready to take a shower, work in the kitchen, etc.
On larger homes, yes there are multiple tankless units.
We chose to do one large unit instead of multiple smaller units and I don't regret it because of the maintenance...
The maintenance is a bit of a PITA. The unit needs to be taken apart once or twice a year to have multiple filters and screens cleaned out and the heat exchanger also needs to be de-scaled. The later exercise involves isolating the system from the house, (with valves) and then using the service ports to hook up a circulating pump to run cleaning solution through the unit for a period of time.