Tankless water heaters

They make mini electric tanked heaters for exactly this. A tank would require a lot less demand on your electrical system. On demand electrics can really draw a lot of amps.
This is what I did (Bosch 2.5 gallon, under the kitchen sink) I got tired of running the water for a full minute to get hot water. I have it plumbed to the hot water line from the main water heater, so by the time I use the 2.5 gallons I am getting hot water from the main heater. But I very rarely use that much water at one time, so it doesn't work very hard as it pretty much just keeps the already hot water available at the sink, and rewarms the water that has cooled between the main water heater and kitchen.

Brian
 
We have a tankless in our apartment. My only gripe is the way the temperature is controlled. On our unit (Navien) the heater come on when it senses water flowing.

If you are running hot water on a very low flow rate heater won't get triggered. This leads to your hot water turning into ice cold water until you open the faucet a bit more. Then you have to flush all the cold water out of the pipes to get it hot again.

Small gripe but it bugs me when I'm trying to do dishes and suddenly water turns ice cold. This is my only experience with tankless heaters so maybe it's a quirk / defect of our unit (a plumber I talked to said it's normal and gave me the flow rate explanation, so I assume I'm not the only one).
 
We have a tankless in our apartment. My only gripe is the way the temperature is controlled. On our unit (Navien) the heater come on when it senses water flowing.

If you are running hot water on a very low flow rate heater won't get triggered. This leads to your hot water turning into ice cold water until you open the faucet a bit more. Then you have to flush all the cold water out of the pipes to get it hot again.

Small gripe but it bugs me when I'm trying to do dishes and suddenly water turns ice cold. This is my only experience with tankless heaters so maybe it's a quirk / defect of our unit (a plumber I talked to said it's normal and gave me the flow rate explanation, so I assume I'm not the only one).
Normal

Tankless have their place, but if you want reliable hot water the old fashioned tanked water heaters are best.
 
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We have a tankless in our apartment. My only gripe is the way the temperature is controlled. On our unit (Navien) the heater come on when it senses water flowing.

If you are running hot water on a very low flow rate heater won't get triggered. This leads to your hot water turning into ice cold water until you open the faucet a bit more. Then you have to flush all the cold water out of the pipes to get it hot again....
Tankless water heaters need a minimum flow to keep them cool and prevent them from burning up, hence your issue.
 
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Normal

Tankless have their place, but if you want reliable hot water the old fashioned tanked water heaters are best.
See, that's the whole thing. The verdict isn't out on the reliability of the tankless and hopefully won't be out for a long time, but the tanked water heaters haven't been reliable. The tankless replaces the third, maybe even the fourth unit whose failure mode has been to split open and create a huge flood. At least this time the tank didn't leak, but the ignitor unit gave out. I probably could have just replaced that component but I viewed it as a ticking time bomb for several reasons. And when it was removed, it couldn't even be drained normally because the manufacturer thought it would be a stellar idea to put plastic threads in the drain valve and of course they stripped on the first attempt to do a maintenance flush of the tank. The hose bib had to be wrenched out but the resulting mess was still less than was normal for the course.
 
We have had a tankless in the house for about 15 years and cabin for about 5. We switched to tankless to lower energy costs and reduce space consumed by water heater. Our house has hard water so I was advised to flush with a 50/50 vinegar and water solution annually, which i have done. I never noticed a difference when we switched to tankless. I really didn't expect it to last 15 years but, here we are. I'm familiar with heat exchangers in industry but, I just assumed the residential versions would be less robust. I have friends that have had their tankless on the outside of their house for close to 20 years (they feed me with beers once a year to flush it for them) without any issue. Neither of our households have time for kids so just two adults per home which lowers the usage. btw, these are gas fired, i have no experience with electric.
 
Rinnai natural gas tankless since 2016. Love it.
I should be better about doing the vinegar flush every year. I've managed to do it every 4 years.
I might be better at it going forward because I found out that if you pour vinegar on your wood fence the carpenter bees leave the wood alone. That incentivizes me to do my flush, then use that used vinegar to treat my fence instead of pouring new vinegar on the fence. I'm frugal. Two uses out of one product? You got it.
 
Oh, weird - that's something I'll remember next spring.

But are you ok with your property line smelling like a Boardwalk Fries?
The strong smell goes away within a day. The mild smell is gone within a week. The protection lasts for about 2-3 months.
It was one of those "I read it on the internet" things. I doubted it, but tried it. It was absolutely effective for me. We went from seeing 20+ carpenter bees a day to not seeing any for a couple months.
 
See, that's the whole thing. The verdict isn't out on the reliability of the tankless and hopefully won't be out for a long time, but the tanked water heaters haven't been reliable. The tankless replaces the third, maybe even the fourth unit whose failure mode has been to split open and create a huge flood. At least this time the tank didn't leak, but the ignitor unit gave out. I probably could have just replaced that component but I viewed it as a ticking time bomb for several reasons. And when it was removed, it couldn't even be drained normally because the manufacturer thought it would be a stellar idea to put plastic threads in the drain valve and of course they stripped on the first attempt to do a maintenance flush of the tank. The hose bib had to be wrenched out but the resulting mess was still less than was normal for the course.
Yeah, many or possibly most manufactures have gone cheap. Plastic drain valves are a good example of this. During installation those valves should be changed out. Also there are many manufacturers out there making both tanked and tankless units so quality will vary. My experience with the tankless mirrors all the issues others have mentioned plus many fail to heat instances due to failed sensors or components. The tankless units are more complicated than a simple tanked unit; there's more to break...

Tankless offers significant benefit in an RV over a tanked unit. I will install one in any RV I own, and even remove a perfectly functioning tanked unit to install tankless in the setting. Outside of that setting though I would prefer it to just work. Not sure why you have had so many issues with your tanked units. Perhaps you have water that attacks the tanks?
 
Yeah, many or possibly most manufactures have gone cheap. Plastic drain valves are a good example of this. During installation those valves should be changed out. Also there are many manufacturers out there making both tanked and tankless units so quality will vary. My experience with the tankless mirrors all the issues others have mentioned plus many fail to heat instances due to failed sensors or components. The tankless units are more complicated than a simple tanked unit; there's more to break...

Tankless offers significant benefit in an RV over a tanked unit. I will install one in any RV I own, and even remove a perfectly functioning tanked unit to install tankless in the setting. Outside of that setting though I would prefer it to just work. Not sure why you have had so many issues with your tanked units. Perhaps you have water that attacks the tanks?
The water is hard, but not particularly corrosive. Obviously the water seems to be attacking the tanks. I suppose there could also be some sort of galvanic action issue too through the piping. I assume the pressure tanks are made of steel, which is anodic to the copper piping attached to the fittings.
 
Nice work, I have the same brand. Pretty solid product. You’ll have to clean out the filter every couple years, you might get some error messages one day that say to clean it. Other than that I’m happy with it.
 
Nice work, I have the same brand. Pretty solid product. You’ll have to clean out the filter every couple years, you might get some error messages one day that say to clean it. Other than that I’m happy with it.
Is that a big deal?

I've been researching the yearly "flush" which I understand is a disconnect and recirc with anti-scalant. I studied the piping array and realized that the installer had put in three-way flush valves, which should make the process easy with the right rig. I might just order the flush kit and go at it myself.
 
A year ago our 15 year old gas water heater died. We priced out both tankless and gas fired replacements. The tankless was almost exactly twice the cost of a commercial grade gas (with 15 year warranty). Working the math, we'd need 15+ years to amortize the cost difference of the tankless. At 77 years of age, I chose to stick with the "old" style (and save the money up front).
 
We went tankless in the house in part because we liked the one in our cabin, and also because the space made available by getting rid of the tank gave us better options during the kitchen/laundry room remodel.
 
I bought this brand when I knew they were made in US: https://www.eztankless.com/household-tankless-water-heaters
Viewing their website now, it appears the units are now built offshore. When I installed mine, since it wasn't electric with a ground lug, I did install a ground strap from the copper heating element to a copper pipe nearby keeping stray electric currents in check. I do drain my unit after every trip, and the drain knob, and threads are all brass. The piping and valves are all brass, and the heat exchanger is aluminum or brass depending on model.

I think all tankless require an annual rinse with white vinegar. It takes a few min to disconnect and use a rubber hose and funnel to rinse with white vinegar.
 
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Dilemma....

I should have caught this while the pipes were being plumbed in, but one of the flush bypass taps (two way valve) was installed directly facing the gas hose, which will probably require the hose to be removed to access the bypass tap.

The valve itself appears to have a true union connection with the tank. Below it, is a copper crimp joint (all the joints are crimp joints.) Should I be able to rotate it 45 degrees with a pipe wrench without destroying the seal?
 
A copper crimp ring joint on Pex? You should be able to rotate it; at least it's worked every time I've done it.
 
In the back of the house we removed two 70 gallon water heaters and replaced with a large tankless last year. It’s been wonderful and not hard to imagine the energy saving.
 
A copper crimp ring joint on Pex? You should be able to rotate it; at least it's worked every time I've done it.
It's on a metal valve, not PEX. But, no matter, I believe I have found a solution to my dilemma...
Screenshot 2024-11-22 151244.jpg
At least I'm pretty sure the fittings to the three way valve are garden hose thread. I'm not going to have to worry about it for a year.
 
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