Further to your experience Dan, they have so called intelligent units which 
adjust the gas and subsequent heat according to the water flow. Apparently some 
even know which taps are open so, for example they can supply hotter water for 
a dish-washer. I don't know or understand how they might adjust for mixed use 
like a shower and dish washer at the same time, perhaps they don't.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dan Rossi 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Monday, March 24, 2008 12:12 PM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Why Choose a Tankless Water Heater?


  When I was looking at tankless water heaters, these were a single heater 
  in the basement to heat the water for the entire house. So, the pipe run 
  to the fixture would be the same distance as with my regular hot water 
  tank, and thus no instant hot water at the fixture and no water savings.

  The energy savings comes in two places; first, you don't keep a big tank 
  of water hot when you are not using it. This is somewhat offset by having 
  to use greater energy to heat water faster, but apparently still a 
  savings. Secondly, you don't need to heat water as hot. Since a hot 
  water tank has a limited amount of hot water in it, you tend to mix hot 
  and cold water to get a warm shower and more overall water at that warm 
  temp. The tankless heaters can produce water at a specific temp, so you 
  can just run hot water, which is now just warm, instead of hot and cold 
  water. Again, somewhat balanced by the fact that you will be using more 
  heated water, but heated to a lower temp. apparently, still a savings.

  I only looked at gas heaters. Some of them were sealed combustion 
  chambers, side vented, running as high as 94% efficient. Others were open 
  combustion chambers running more like 84% efficient.

  I ran into trouble since the tankless heater and furnace would have been 
  too close together to place the air intake and exhausts for both systems 
  in such close proximity. I ended up going with a hot water tank that is 
  heated by the furnace. So, one burner for both potable hot water, and 
  home heating water. One loop heats a water jacket around the hot water 
  tank. The other loop heats the house.

  -- 
  Blue skies.
  Dan Rossi
  Carnegie Mellon University.
  E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Tel: (412) 268-9081


   


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