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Water Heater Options

Jim greengo

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 3, 2018
Messages
7,415
Location
Behind my house
1) You can extend water heater life by changing the anode rods every year or two.
2) Years ago when my girls were teens I had the hour long shower problem. Here's what I did: Installed a gate valve to the hot water line to their show and throttled it back to reduce flow rate. They never knew about the valve and wondered why the water flow wasn't so good any more. Solved that problem!! LOL!
A shut off on the hot water side of a water heater is illegal in some places.
 
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mwh

Member
Joined
Apr 11, 2005
Messages
5
Location
champaign
For those of you that have installed a hybrid water heater in your garage, what's the coldest that your garage gets in the winter? If I put the hybrid water heater in the garage, I get the benefit of the cool, dry air for the garage in the summer. But then my worry is storing hot water in a cold garage in the winter (I live in central IL, winters can get pretty cold). I fear losing any efficiency advantage of the hybrid unit because I am constantly fighting the cold garage to keep 50-80 gallons of water at 120-130 degrees for the winter months.

The other thought is to put the hybrid water heater in the basement and route the intake and exhaust air into garage. Would something like that even be code compliant? I know it's not the same as running your conditioned house air in/out of the garage (clearly against code), but is it similar enough?
 

Vtor

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 2, 2019
Messages
96
Location
Left Side of the Moon
We made switch to tankless 2 years ago. Replacing a conventional hot water heater and hot water boiler with a Rinnai combi unit.

Hot water delivery is *slower* to start, but it's as hot as you can bear and with unlimited fuel, unlimited hot water supply. With no metric as to water usage before and after, energy usage is down 15% compared to two separate units. Practically eliminated temperature swings as boiler is able to throttle heat output vs outdoor temp.

Cost.. roughly 2.5x conventional hot water heater, esp if you opt for combi or more premium units. We opted for 15yr warranty model. Despite self install, our utility still credited us for installing more energy efficient appliance. Nice chunk of change.

To remedy the slow delivery, I added a circulator that turns on and forces hot water to circulate back through cold water line to speed up delivery. I have it set to run about 90 seconds triggered off a flow switch.

Space savings was a *nice* bonus. Maintenance is about hour worth of effort once a year and $20 worth of vinegar solution.
 

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beemerphile

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 9, 2021
Messages
727
Location
Danielsville, GA USA
If I had household members who were taking forever showers that ran them out of hot water I'd simply tell them to take shorter showers. I'd certainly take that road with the kids although it might be a little harder sell if it's the wife.
When you are old and arthritic those long hot showers are therapy after a hard day's work. If you come for my tankless Rinnai heater, bring lots of backup.
 

no704

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 27, 2016
Messages
5,203
Plumb the softener into only the feed to the water heater. The not soft cold water makes it possible to wash off soap.
Still keeps heater and dishwasher clean.
 
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mpire

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 21, 2008
Messages
1,837
Location
Florida
If your water heater is in the garage, then the heat pump is a great option. My power company offered a $750 rebate to install one, and I had it a solid decade with no issues.

You can keep the old water heater and use it as a pre-warm tank so the water comes up to room temp before entering the new water heater.

My water heater had a non-metal tank and it never corroded. The key to longevity is to not turn on the heating elements and use the heat pump mode exclusively. It was 50 gallon tank and was great for my use.

However, the biggest benefit other than lower cost to run was that it removed all the humidity from my garage. Highly recommended for this feature alone.

(The water valve to reduce flow to the girls shower sounds brilliant, IMHO)

The heat pump water heater was around $1000 when I bought it, not sure if you picked an expensive version or if prices have more than doubled. YMMV.
 

jahn

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 3, 2009
Messages
47
Location
Hell, Michigan (Pinckney)
We are finishing our basement for my wife's office. Our Hot Water Tank is located there and by the date code is 2002.
It's not leaking and working fine for now, but being 20+ years old how much time do I really have? Should I be pro-active?

I'm in Michigan with well water and a water softener. If I do change it out, would a tankless be a choice? What's your experience with the tankless?
 

mike93lx

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 9, 2013
Messages
37,330
Location
Richmond, VA
We are finishing our basement for my wife's office. Our Hot Water Tank is located there and by the date code is 2002.
It's not leaking and working fine for now, but being 20+ years old how much time do I really have? Should I be pro-active?

I'm in Michigan with well water and a water softener. If I do change it out, would a tankless be a choice? What's your experience with the tankless?
It has anywhere from 1 hour to 20 years left in it. Helpful, eh? How's the anode rod look? I bet there isn't anything left.

In a finished space, I think I'd proactively replace.

If you have natural gas, or lots of cheap electrical service, tankless can be great. I had one on well water and used an iron filter, in addition to a softener, just to protect the heater. Adding a holding tank can help a ton and it allowed me to schedule when the heater would run. Gas usage was very low
 

jahn

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 3, 2009
Messages
47
Location
Hell, Michigan (Pinckney)
It has anywhere from 1 hour to 20 years left in it. Helpful, eh? How's the anode rod look? I bet there isn't anything left.

In a finished space, I think I'd proactively replace.

If you have natural gas, or lots of cheap electrical service, tankless can be great. I had one on well water and used an iron filter, in addition to a softener, just to protect the heater. Adding a holding tank can help a ton and it allowed me to schedule when the heater would run. Gas usage was very low

It has anywhere from 1 hour to 20 years left in it. Helpful, eh? How's the anode rod look? I bet there isn't anything left.

In a finished space, I think I'd proactively replace.

If you have natural gas, or lots of cheap electrical service, tankless can be great. I had one on well water and used an iron filter, in addition to a softener, just to protect the heater. Adding a holding tank can help a ton and it allowed me to schedule when the heater would run. Gas usage was very low
Yes, that 1 hour or 20 years has me thinking after investing in redoing the basement and making it the bosses office. I don't need or want to hear the " we got water down here ruining my stuff", hence me asking the Tank/Tankless question.

Anode, is good - less than a year old (an electronic one). Yes we use natural gas for the existing tank system. We do use a Iron Additive Salt since we did have some iron in our water, but would add the filter, thanks.

What size holding tank did you use, did it really help, it seem to defeat the purpose of the tankless system?

Thanks: Tankless for Dummies is what I need
 

mike93lx

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 9, 2013
Messages
37,330
Location
Richmond, VA
Yes, that 1 hour or 20 years has me thinking after investing in redoing the basement and making it the bosses office. I don't need or want to hear the " we got water down here ruining my stuff", hence me asking the Tank/Tankless question.

Anode, is good - less than a year old (an electronic one). Yes we use natural gas for the existing tank system. We do use a Iron Additive Salt since we did have some iron in our water, but would add the filter, thanks.

What size holding tank did you use, did it really help, it seem to defeat the purpose of the tankless system?

Thanks: Tankless for Dummies is what I need
Mine was about 50gal. It was existing when we bought the house, but I liked that I could set the timer to only make hot water in the mornings and evenings. Outside of the heating season, I'd run so little gas that I'd be near the billing minimums and that included cooking use. No idea if that setup saved money over the alternative, but it was so cheap to run that I didn't care
 
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