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Tankless water heaters

Started by Toolman, June 28, 2008, 06:02:28 PM

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Toolman

Looking at purchasing a propane fired tankless water heater. Anyone have experience with these? They seem to be more efficient.
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have" (Thomas Jefferson)

submarinesailor

I have looked into them and plan on putting one in one of these days.  Based on life cycle costing, they are normally much lower in cost to run.  Also, the one I like best is the Rinnai:  http://www.rinnai.us/Products/water_heaters.aspx.

They may cost more, but seen to be much more reliable.

Spell Check - did I just see a spell check working on this reply?????????????????

Bruce

zopi

I just got done re-plumbing the entire house with PEX and installing  a rinnai water heater...love it!

I have three girls and a wife, good bloody luck getting some hot water...with the tankless it is endless..

and yes, it is quite a bit more efficient.

they say they work nicely for a booster to a solar unit too...but you have to use a tempering valve
as the unit won't take more than a certain temp of input water.
Got Wood?
LT-15G GO chassis added.
WM sharpener and setter
And lots of junk.

Gordon

Tankless with propane is the only way to go!!! The rinnai is a very good unit, I installed a few of these the past few years. The key to these is a very short vent as it's very expensive. Another thing is hard water can reduce the efficiency of the coil with scale build up.

Gordon

StorminN

Get a unit without a pilot light... you'd be surprised how much gas a pilot light uses. Rinnai must make one and I know Bosch makes an AquaStar that doesn't even have to be plugged in, the water pressure creates the spark needed to light the flame (through a little water wheel or something?)

-Norm.
Happiness... is a sharp saw.

logwalker

I went with Takagi TK Juniors for my infloor heating. It is a backup for the wood boiler. I heard many negatives about the Bosch. Surprising as they are usually pretty good stuff. The takagis have a 10 year warranty as a heating boiler. Joe
Let's all be careful out there tomorrow. Lt40hd, 22' Kenworth Flatbed rollback dump, MM45B Mitsubishi trackhoe, Clark5000lb Forklift, Kubota L2850 tractor

Toolman

Thanks for the reponses. I was looking at the Bosch AquaStar. As far as scale buildup on the coils, I do have hard water(iron,sulfur, not much lime) I was going to add an additional whole house filter prior to the heater. Somebody told me that when they change their whole house filter, they fill filter housing with lime-away, then run their tap for a minute to allow solution to enter into pipes,then wait for fifteen minutes for lime-away to work scale loose. They then turn tap on all faucets to get rid of any solution in pipes. Anybody ever try this. I have reservations regarding this. Concern of ingesting this stuff.

Appreciate any input
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have" (Thomas Jefferson)

Mooseherder

How much do these cost ballpark figure?
Couldn't find any pricing.  I hate that. :D

Gordon

I've installed one Bosch and havent heard another thing about it so it must be working fine. The reason for the Bosch over the Rinnai was cost, a few hundred dollar savings. Anyone can buy the Bosch, but you must be cerified to buy the Rinnai from the supply house.

Both models use a ramped flame. The faster the water flow thru the heater the more btu is put out for --- the larger the flame.

Something else that must be considered is the existing gas line size. Make sure your gas line is large enough or figure in the cost of running a new larger gas line to the new heater. Your gas line can't be smaller than the inlet of the heater.

Gordon

zopi

Quote from: Mooseherder on June 29, 2008, 10:01:17 AM
How much do these cost ballpark figure?
Couldn't find any pricing.  I hate that. :D

ours was a couple grand installed
Got Wood?
LT-15G GO chassis added.
WM sharpener and setter
And lots of junk.

Don P

Good to see you Gordon   :)

We had a Takagi installed on the job for the radiant system. It has worked fine so far. We did have some issues with the stack, the planned exit developed too much length so we had to back up and go through the foundation wall. I have heard of cold air getting in through the exhaust and freezing some units. I believe this one had a sensor that would call for flame if that begins to happen (not positive, better check that) There was a kit that is a section of pipe with a damper that fits just above the unit in the stack. If a wind comes in it shuts that damper. We ordered that as well. If the exhaust is impeded by a shut damper it will shut down. Although we have it facing west and have alot of exposure to the prevailing wind it has not shut down to my knowledge. Now that I know a little more I'll watch for that placement better in the future.

I think I'd rather use vinegar in a potable supply, but I'd check with the manufacturer first.

Left Coast Chris

Did anyone find an operating cost comparison between propane and electric versions?  With propane so high in cost would'nt electric be cheaper to operate at some point?      The electric cars are starting to look pretty good.
Home built cantilever head, 24 HP honda mill, Case 580D, MF 135 and one Squirel Dog Jack Russel Mix -- Crickett

zopi

I'm in a rural Coop..kinda expensive for electric, plus the propane tank is like 15 feet from where I wanted it.
Got Wood?
LT-15G GO chassis added.
WM sharpener and setter
And lots of junk.

Toolman

Here in Pennsylvania, deregulation kicks in 2009.  Electric companies are already telling folks to look forward to 30-70% increase next year. Thats why I'm trying to get away from electric. I'm already looking into solar panels for the house, but that's a topic that needs a thread of it's own.


Thanks for all the input guys, appreciate it.
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have" (Thomas Jefferson)

zopi

Quote from: Toolman on June 29, 2008, 08:59:15 PM
Here in Pennsylvania, deregulation kicks in 2009.  Electric companies are already telling folks to look forward to 30-70% increase next year. Thats why I'm trying to get away from electric. I'm already looking into solar panels for the house, but that's a topic that needs a thread of it's own.

By the time i get back from japan in a few years, i am hoping the nano panels will be a bit more
mainstream, and known reliable...my goal is to be mostly water and electric independent..oh..I'm already water independent..just want one more deep well for insurance and irrigation.
Got Wood?
LT-15G GO chassis added.
WM sharpener and setter
And lots of junk.

Handy Andy

  When we built my daughters house, we put in a rheem tankless water heater.  Price was about half of the rinnai (spelling?)  and the only negative was we had to mount it on the end of the house against the basement wall.  The thing only came with enough flue to go through a 4" wall, and had to get a piece to go through the 8", even though we went through the rim joist above the wall. It works well, but on the end of the house it is a long way to the bathroom on the other end.  We used pex pipe, and the manifold system, so takes a long time to get hot water, and even if you have it warmed up one place, still is a long time to get hot water to another connection.  Need a water heater on both ends of the house. 
My name's Jim, I like wood.

StorminN

Andy,

I toured a house with a setup where the guy put in a little circulator pump and some creative tee plumbing... he had a timer switch (like a bathroom fan crank switch) that he would turn on, wait 10-15 seconds, and then turn the hot water faucet on... he had hot water right at the tap by then. It's inconvenient to use the timer, but it eliminates a second heater, the cold-water-turning-to-hot, and still uses less energy than a not-on-demand heater.

-Norm.
Happiness... is a sharp saw.

JSNH

You mentioned hard water. My neighbor has had a few Tankless hot water heaters. I beleive he is on #3 now over 25 years. He has hard water and the coils rot out. By the time the coils go the parts are not avaliable so he buys a new one. If you have hard water look at the life cost of the unit. You may be better off spending money on a solar preheat with a simple to replace gas or electric heater as the primary. Granted the tankless are modern, cool and efficient but one must weigh the savings and additional cost.

StorminN

Quote from: JSNH on June 30, 2008, 09:58:19 PMYou may be better off spending money on a solar preheat with a simple to replace gas or electric heater as the primary. Granted the tankless are modern, cool and efficient but one must weigh the savings and additional cost.

JSNH is right, solar preheat is good bang for your buck, if you do it right. I couple of vacuum tube collectors like the Apricus or Thermomax, and a wand heat exchanger in your hot water tank will work.

If you went that route, though... I'd stick with an electric tank, at least you can super insulate them. The gas-fired hot water tanks sometimes have a pilot light (wasted gas) and they ALL have a central flue with heat baffles... this is efficient for getting the heat from the burned gas into your water, but as soon as the flame shuts off, the flue and baffles are just as efficient at getting the heat back out of your water and up the chimney...

-Norm.
Happiness... is a sharp saw.

Don P

Some thoughts since this thread started,
Our tankless on the job passed inspection and should have failed, I'm installing a outside combustion air duct now... ooops  :-[

The instant hot recirc system at Lowes the other day was priced around $200

Water heater timers on conventional water heaters probably have a better lifetime cost than the tankless.

rowerwet

I installe a paloma tankless (rheem) 3 years ago when my last hot water heater died, I have propane and needed a powervent heater anyway. the paloma was only $50 more than the 50 gal powervent I was going to get at Home Depot. ( $699 I think) you also need a $299 exhaust pipe kit (stainless) which gives all the possible parts you could need since HD doesn't stock stainless pipe.
    the paloma has electronic ignition, freeze protection (electric) and a remote thermostat,
so all I do is set the water temp I want and never turn on the cold water. It saves me money on my gas, I never run out of hot water, and with some creative plumbing and a curculator pump I clould use it to back up my outdoor pellet boiler.
josh.
Husky 460, Fiskars x27, X7

ely

i noticed the other day while reading the literature that came in the box with my unit, it has a 10 year garunnttee. not certain what that covers but if my water does not eat it up it should be good to go.

Toolman

Just purchased Bosch Aquastar Tankless water heater yesterday. Lower heating element went bad on my 12 yr old Rheem water heater. When I attempted to unthread the element the metal crumbled around it. Time for new heater. My wife and I decided to purchase the tankless. I mounted it on wall and plumbed the water connections. Tomorrow I will connect gas line. I'm running 3/4" line 30 ft. from tank, I hope that will be sufficient supply. The regulator off tank was about same distance to gas stove we had. (it was replaced with a now electric stove). I hope this thing does the job. My ground water temp. is showing 51 degrees . Need to raise temp around 75 deg. Anybody have any advice or suggestions?
I also have to tap out 3" hole through cinder block wall for exhaust. My exhaust tube is short, 22" up and then 90 deg out through 8 " wall. I'll report back with results. I'm hearing mixed reviews on tankless units. Also, my exhaust is facing east, with plenty of outside shelter. I'm not too concerned about a cold draft freezing the heat exchanger.
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have" (Thomas Jefferson)

Ironwood

Keep the replies coming, we are considering one as well.

Ironwood
There is no scarcity of opportunity to make a living at what you love to do, there is only scarcity of resolve to make it happen.- Wayne Dyer

Toolman

Tankless heater installation completed today. Works great. Had kitchen and bathroom hot taps running full blast simutaneously and had plenty of hot water.  Kept all plumbing intact where hot water tank once sat, just in case ;)
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have" (Thomas Jefferson)

Don_Papenburg

Do any of them tankless have power vent ? I have 20' of stainless exhaust straight (almost) out the roof .  Or 24 inches of solid concete and stone to drill out the wall . I ain't doing that .
Frick saw mill  '58   820 John Deere power. Diamond T trucks

Toolman

"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have" (Thomas Jefferson)

woodrat

I lived with an older, small Paloma for years, and it was awesome. They were really common in the backcountry neighborhoods in northern CA. Ours was mounted where it was easy to get at, and we only turned it on when we needed the water and then turned it off when done, so we didn't have the pilot light sucking up all the gas.

Wish I had one here...
1996 Woodmizer LT40HD
Yanmar 3220D and MF 253
Wallenstein FX 65 logging winch
Husky 61, 272XP, 372XP, 346XP, 353
Stihl 036, 046 with Lewis Winch
78 Chevy C30 dump truck, 80 Ford F350 4x4
35 ton firewood splitter
Eastonmade 22-28 splitter and conveyor
and ...lots of other junk...

Toolman

This Bosch that I installed does'nt have a pilot light. It is an electronic ignition that activates when the water begins flowing.
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have" (Thomas Jefferson)

Toolman

I know it's been 8 months since I started this post, but, wanted to report my results with my Bosch tankless water heater. We have 4 living in our home. The wife showers twice a day, each of the kids and myself shower once a day on average. 3 loads of wash a week and dishwasher runs once a day. I've been averaging a 100 lb tank every 60 days, about $30.00 month, or $1.00 a day. So far, have not had any issues with the unit. There is a faucet located on the other side of the house that takes about 1 minute for hot water to flow. Over-all I am pleased with it. I did install two who house filters prior to unit. The 1st has a 5 micr. filter, the 2nd has a 1 micron filter. So far, they have'nt had to be changed. The 1 micron will probably get changed this month.
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have" (Thomas Jefferson)

maple flats

I have a Bosch I bought at a garage sale, in the original sealed box brand new for $500. They were going to use it but couldn't figure out how to vent or where to get vent parts. I will be installing it in our new home that I am just sawing the lumber for.
logging small time for years but just learning how,  2012 36 HP Mahindra tractor, 3point log arch, 8000# class excavator, lifts 2500# and sets logs on mill precisely where needed, Woodland Mills HM130Max , maple syrup a hobby that consumes my time. looking to learn blacksmithing.

Toolman

Wow! They gave on that pretty quick. You got a good deal. The vent kit is sold seperately. Make sure you get the proper length vent pipe. Most kits contain vent for 6" wall. Mine required an 8" . I bored mine through cinder block wall.
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have" (Thomas Jefferson)

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