Instant Hot Water - Cheap and Easy
Instant Hot Water - An inexpensive easy way to conserve water.
Instant hot water has a lot to be said for it. Not
having to stand around waiting is one. Saving tons of water is
another. Instant hot water can save you time water and energy, and
along with those savings are other less tangible benefits.
Reduced
green house gasses are released into the atmosphere when you use less
water since it requires energy to pump and process water before it gets
to your home, and then again as sewage. If you have a septic system it
can extend the life of your system. If you are on a well, your pump
won’t have to run as much.
There are a variety of systems on the market today
that are designed to get you faster hot water. There are different
views on just what “instant hot water” is. Some people say that you
have to be able to get hot water within a second or two after turning on
a tap. With most of these systems there is definitely a waiting period,
which usually occurs before you turn on the tap, so not all people view
all of these systems as producing “instant hot water”.
Instant hot water
For our purposes we shall define “instant hot
water” as that which arrives within a few seconds of turning on the tap
even if you had to wait before turning on the tap.
One way to have instant hot water is to circulate
the water in a big loop from the outlet of the water heater, past each
fixture, and on back to the inlet of the water heater. In my opinion
this is the only way to really have “instant” heated water. You walk up
to the tap and turn it on, and within a second or two it’s there.
At first this sounds like a great idea, but after
closer scrutiny it becomes obvious that this system is not so great
after all. It is an energy hog! What you end up with is a giant heat
radiating system that keeps the water heater working harder and more
often to keep this big piping radiator hot. Even if you insulate the
heck out of the pipes, the surface area to volume ratio insures that you
will consume a huge amount of energy. Energy to heat water is much more
expensive than the water that is being heated.
These continuously circulating systems also suffer
from breakdowns due to the fact that heated water tends to form sediment
even while being circulated. This sediment gets deposited on the
surfaces of the pump parts and pipes forming clogging deposits which
cause breakdowns.
Continuous circulating systems won’t work with
tankless water heaters. This is unfortunate, since tankless water
heaters take longer to get the heated water than normal plumbing
systems. More wasted water is the result.
Grundfos and Taco are two manufacturers of
continuous circulating pumps and systems.
Temperature controlled hot water
circulating systems
An alternative to the continuous circulating
systems are the temperature controlled circulating systems that use the
cold water piping as the return line back to the water heater. Like the
previously discussed system, the hot water gets circulated in a big loop
from the water heater, past the fixtures, and back to the water heater.
The pump is usually located at the fixture furthest from the water
heater, and the inlet connects to the hot pipe and the outlet connects
to the cold water pipe With some systems the pump can be located at the
heater, and just a valve at the fixture.
Since you obviously don’t want your cold water
piping full of heated water, the pump has a temperature sensing circuit,
and the circuit shuts the pump off when the water gets up to about 95
degrees at the pump. The pump turns back on when the water temperature
cools down to about 85 degrees.
This means that when you turn on the
tap you don’t have to wait as long for the hot water to reach you since
the pipes aren’t as cold and won’t suck the heat out as much as cold
pipes would and so you get hot water more quickly. It certainly isn’t
instant hot water though.
These “luke warm” systems as I call them also
waste a whole lot of energy since they keep the pipes full of partially
heated water. They don’t use as much energy as the standard circulating
systems, but they still use much more energy than a normal plumbing
system uses.
Again, as with the previous types of systems the
luke warm systems will not work with a tankless water heater. They pump
water much too slowly to activate the tankless water heater’s flow
switch, and so they would just circulate cold water around and around.
Manufacturer’s of the luke warm systems include
RedyTemp, Laing, Grundfos and
Watts.
Hot water demand systems
The good news is there is a type of system that
gets you fast hot water, doesn’t run water down the drain, doesn’t use
more energy, and even works with tankless water heaters. In addition it
is inexpensive and easy to install. The type of system I am talking
about is a “demand system”. When you “demand” heated water, by pressing
a button, the pump comes on and pumps the heated water to your fixture
rapidly. As with the luke warm systems, the pump is located at the
furthest fixture from the heater, and connects to the hot and cold
lines.
Instead of being temperature controlled though, the
pump only turns on when you turn it on. It has a temperature sensor
built in, and when hot water reaches the fixture the pumps shuts off. At
that point you have instant hot water when you turn on the tap.
Since
the heated water was not circulated, you did not use any more heat
energy than if you had a normal plumbing system. Since the pump only
runs for a few seconds each time, it only uses a dollar or two per year
in electricity costs. If you have a system with a powerful pump like
the Chilipepper CP6000 pump, you can get your water much faster than
normal.
The CP6000 pumps up to 3 gallons per minute, and many fixtures
limit flow rates to less than one gallon per minute. So you can get
your heated water up to three times as fast. And what you get is hot
water, not luke warm water.
The demand type systems do not seem to have any
drawbacks. They get you your hot water faster, saving you time. They
don’t use more energy than a standard system. They are inexpensive, or
at least some of them are. And some of them work with tankless water
heaters as well. As long as the pump is strong enough to turn on the
heater, it will work. Still not instant hot water until you turn on the tap.
The Chilipepper pump has the strongest pump on the
market and will turn on any tankless water heater. Metlund makes
several models, and not all will work with a tankless water heater so if
you have a tankless water heater check with the manufacturer to make
sure it will work with your model of heater.
Hot water systems are inexpensive and easy
to install
Demand systems are typically inexpensive, the least
expensive being the Chilipepper at about $180.00, and Metlund with
several models under $300.00. Taco also manufactures a demand system
very similar to the Metlund D’mand system. Often you can install them
without even turning off the hot water to the house, just turn off the
angle stops under the sink where you are installing it. You will need a
110 volt outlet to plug the pump into.
If you decide you are interested in a demand type
system check with you local water company, as several water companies
around the country offer their customers rebates of up to $200.00 for
the installation of such a system to conserve water. So be green, help
out the environment, and stop waiting for hot water.
Chilipepper Sales 1380 Greg St., # 221 Sparks Nevada, 89431
PH (775)-359-1223