Tankless Water Heater? Turn it Green with Faster Hot Water!
Tankless water heaters waste more water
than tank type water heaters
If you have a tankless water heater then you
probably already know that it takes longer to get hot water with a
tankless water heater than with an old fashioned storage tank type water
heater. Typically tankless water heaters take 10 to 20 seconds longer to
get hot water to the fixtures. But you can turn it green!
While you wait for the hot water to arrive, you are running
water down the drain. What a shame to have to waste water to save
energy. But there is something you can do to change the situation.
Hot water pumps
There are hot water pumps designed specifically to
get you your hot water faster, and they eliminate running water down the
drain while you are waiting. These pumps or pumping systems are called
“Demand “hot water systems. There are several manufactures of such
systems.
Let’s take a minute and examine the reasons for the
lengthy delay in obtaining hot water at the fixtures. Back in the old
days, when there were no low flow fixtures, you could get your hot water
pretty fast, but you still used just as much water.
Speed depends in part on flow rate and
pipe diameter
When you have a
faucet that spews out 6 gallons a minute your wait is pretty small. For
example, a ˝” diameter pipe 63 feet long holds a gallon of water. So if
your fixture allows water to flow at 5 gallons per minute, it would take
only 12 seconds for the water to flow through the 63 feet of pipe. If
you have a low flow faucet at the sink which only allows a maximum of 1
gallon per minute, it will take 60 seconds for the water to reach the
fixture. Quite a difference.
But wait, there is more. Since the pipe material
is cold, (unless you recently used hot water), it will absorb heat from
the water as it flows to the sink until the pipe warms up to the
temperature of the water. The colder the pipe the longer it takes to get
hot water to the sink.
Tankless water heater operation
Tankless water heaters don’t have a tank full of
hot water waiting to be piped to the fixture at a moments notice…first
you have to heat the water. A tankless water heater is like a coil of
pipe with a burner under it. In order for the water to get hot it must
stay in the flames for a certain period of time.
When you turn on your
hot water the water in the middle of that coiled up pipe won’t be in the
flames long enough to get hot. The water needs to travel through the
entire coil pipe to reach full temperature. So add the time it takes
for the water to travel through the coiled up pipe in the tankless water
heater.
Slow hot water - the solution
So what do we do about our slow hot water problem? We can pump the water
in a loop from the outlet of the heater through the hot water piping and
cold water piping back to the water heater inlet. If we turn the pump
off just before the hot water reaches the fixture we won’t get hot water
into the cold water piping and our hot water arrives much more quickly.
When you hear the pump shut off you can turn on your faucet
and presto! Instant hot water! And as an added bonus no water gets run down the drain at all. It turns
your hot water system green!
These demand hot water systems put a small pump at
the furthest fixture from your water heater and connect them between the
hot and cold water lines. There is a temperature sensing element in the
pump that shuts the pump off when an increase in temperature is
detected. This prevents hot water from getting in the cold water line.
You do need a power outlet under the sink to plug the pump into.
Push-button hot water
Now when you want hot water you just push a button,
and the pump takes over delivering hot water to the fixture fast without
wastefully running water down the drain. Most manufacturers also have
remote control accessories to activate the pump from other sinks that
may benefit from the same pump, and even to activate it by detecting
motion etc.
There are a number of systems that will work with
tankless water heaters, but not all do. Standard circulating systems
will not work, it must be a “demand” system, otherwise it will void the
warranty. Even some demand systems won’t work unless they have a pump
powerful enough to activate the tankless water heater. Tankless heaters
need a minimum flow rate to turn on and stay on.
Hot water demand systems range in price from about
$180.00 to over $500.00. Studies have shown that a typical family of
four can save over 10,000 gallons of water per year.
Needless to say, by
not using all of that extra water you help reduce the energy required
for pumping and treating the water before it gets to your home, and
after it’s send down the sewer.
Reduced energy usage means reduced
amounts of green house gases being released into the atmosphere.
If you have a tankless water heater and slow hot water, help
preserve our planet and reduce your carbon footprint with a
Chilipepper hot water demand type delivery system.
Chilipepper Sales 1380 Greg St., # 221 Sparks Nevada, 89431
PH (775)-359-1223