this scares the boomer

this scares the boomer

250 Piece Survival Gear First Aid Kit

LifeStraw Water Filter for Hiking and Preparedness

250 Piece Survival Gear First Aid Kit

  1. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    They're okay. Takes a while to get hot water in the kitchen sink.

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Takes a while to get hot water in the kitchen sink.
      Yeah depending on how far away from the sink the heater is. lmaoeven

      >this scares the boomer
      the price maybe.
      the electric ones require an ass ton of amps for anything over 4gph.

      I have a 24kW for 2 and a half baths, two can shower in the same time and there is still enough headroom to wash hands.
      My 30kW electric furnace and old water heater were right next to each other so I just swapped them around, installed a thankless and a heat pump.

      They also terrify anyone who has hard water. They are much less forgiving of the 30+ gr/gal water around here than a tank water heater with a with a bendy heating element.

      It needs a softener, my first heater element lasted only 2 years, but got a replacement on warranty.

      You are aware that gas will burn without the presence of electricity, right?

      It can but the modern water heater wont start if it doesn't have electricity. Grandma had an old one that would maintain a pilot light and work without power, but the thing was from the 80s.
      >picrel, the middle knob is a piezoelectric sparker like one on a gas range

      • 4 months ago
        Anonymous

        My gas water heater is about 10 years old and will run just fine without electricity. It uses a piezo electric lighter to start the pilot and bimetalic strips.

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      Power hungry shit. I'll take 200 liters + 2 heat exchangers + recirculation instead.

      >Takes a while to get hot water in the kitchen sink.
      That's cause you obviously can't have a recirculation line without some storage, lmao.

      • 4 months ago
        Anonymous

        I check back on this thread and just now realize OP's thing runs on gas. Still applies, the heat exchanger can be connected to a gas boiler like the radiators. Recirculation is great.

  2. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    apparently in england it's safe to consume heated water. are these units how they get away with it? still seems sketchy

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      Yeah, I wouldn't trust it for drinking but you can run a toothbrush under it unless you just moved in. Most houses have been retrofitted with these things over the past 20 years. Next scam is replacing them with hydrogen compatible boilers.

  3. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    >this scares the boomer
    the price maybe.
    the electric ones require an ass ton of amps for anything over 4gph.

  4. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    They also terrify anyone who has hard water. They are much less forgiving of the 30+ gr/gal water around here than a tank water heater with a with a bendy heating element.

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      That's why you sell a whole house filtration and softener system to go with it. Major dosh.
      It's just as easy to plumb for rich folks as it is for poor.

  5. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    My boomer parents got one, they like it. My house had one which I replaced with a traditional tank style heater that uses a heat pump with a gas backup. Uses frick all for power and still has hot water when the power is out until the tank is empty.

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      >still has hot water when the power is out until the tank is empty
      Riiiiight

      • 4 months ago
        Anonymous

        You are aware that gas will burn without the presence of electricity, right?

        • 4 months ago
          Anonymous

          >gas will burn without the presence of electricity
          Aren't you going to be surprised during the next winter power outage!
          That's not a fireplace you're looking at. It's a spark plug, a bunch of solenoid valves, fans, pumps, all driven by a computer. And if it is running, it fails safe (valves close, flame extinguishes) when power goes byebye.
          If you don't want to freeze, I recommend getting yourself a nice little computer UPS and/or a DC power inverter (unless you're smart enough to put volts directly on the other side of the supply -- but based on your conduct thus far, I'd guess "no.")

          • 4 months ago
            Anonymous

            https://i.imgur.com/4UKNtXk.jpg

            >Takes a while to get hot water in the kitchen sink.
            Yeah depending on how far away from the sink the heater is. lmaoeven
            [...]
            I have a 24kW for 2 and a half baths, two can shower in the same time and there is still enough headroom to wash hands.
            My 30kW electric furnace and old water heater were right next to each other so I just swapped them around, installed a thankless and a heat pump.
            [...]
            It needs a softener, my first heater element lasted only 2 years, but got a replacement on warranty.
            [...]
            It can but the modern water heater wont start if it doesn't have electricity. Grandma had an old one that would maintain a pilot light and work without power, but the thing was from the 80s.
            >picrel, the middle knob is a piezoelectric sparker like one on a gas range

            you people are fricking morons they still water heaters without electrical connections, go outside

            • 4 months ago
              Anonymous

              I may be a moron. But you're gonna be cold.

              • 4 months ago
                Anonymous

                what are you even trying to say

            • 4 months ago
              Anonymous

              >they still water heaters
              They do indeed.

              • 4 months ago
                Anonymous

                lol I think he ment they still MAKE whatever he was talking about

          • 4 months ago
            Anonymous

            Most fireplaces and gas tank water heaters have a sparking ignititon switch like a gas grill

            You are right about a gas tankless that runs 110v needing a power supply when the power's out

            • 4 months ago
              Anonymous

              >gas will burn without the presence of electricity
              Aren't you going to be surprised during the next winter power outage!
              That's not a fireplace you're looking at. It's a spark plug, a bunch of solenoid valves, fans, pumps, all driven by a computer. And if it is running, it fails safe (valves close, flame extinguishes) when power goes byebye.
              If you don't want to freeze, I recommend getting yourself a nice little computer UPS and/or a DC power inverter (unless you're smart enough to put volts directly on the other side of the supply -- but based on your conduct thus far, I'd guess "no.")

              >If you don't want to freeze, I recommend getting yourself a nice little computer UPS and/or a DC power inverter
              Most of them detect flame presence through ionization of the igniter electrodes and often require proper Live/Neutral wiring, they wont work if they don't sense the Neutral-earth bonding.

              • 4 months ago
                Anonymous

                I don't know about all that gobblyasiatic you wrote but pc power backups from staples or office depot work perfectly well on Rinnai tankless water heaters when the power is out.

      • 4 months ago
        Anonymous

        Anon, it's a 55 gallon tank water heater. That water stays hot even if the power is out for about a day. It's still quite warm after two days.

        • 4 months ago
          Anonymous

          I misread that you were describing your tank water heater. Gomen nasai!

  6. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    I thought about replacing my water cyl with one of these, can they been installed outside?

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      >can they been installed outside?
      Yes, but it is not ideal if you live in an area prone to below freezing temperatures.

  7. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    maybe, but drilling a 5 inch hole into a joist for venting can clench anyone's balloon knot

  8. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    >condensing boilers
    gl when the electrodes wear out every two years, the plastic pieces wear out every 5, and the whole thing shits the bed after 11 unless you pay a premium for oem parts
    just get a normal hot water tank and point the flue upwards, you'd be amazed how long they last

  9. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    My dad doesn’t want his pipes to freeze but doesn’t want to drip hot water cause he thinks it’ll use too much electricity, would it use a significant amount of energy to keep hot water dripping ?

  10. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    hope you dont like HOT showers.

    These are only capable of raising the water temp 30 degtrees above ambient...

    • 4 months ago
      Anonymous

      >These are only capable of raising the water temp 30 degtrees above ambient...

      Source: my ass

  11. 4 months ago
    Anonymous

    I just got pissed at my shop because our old one leaked and we had a tankless boxed up in the closet but the boomers went to home depot and bought a regular replacement unit. Guess you’re right.

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