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I use one of these below, electric around 6K watts, the filament resistance last two years average and costs same as 5dollars, it provide instant hot water in 3 temperatures.Of course for winter 120V model are a bit weak, but my house are all 220V, the 220V model are plenty of hot water in the winter.This device are great value per money, and last for years, the instalation costs are none.http://www.lorenzetti.com.br/portal_duchas.asp
having hot water baseboard heat (oil fired boiler) the domestic hot water coil is incorporated within. IMO, it works superb and it's one less item (hot water tank) that I have to deal with. I'm on well water and my original coil and boiler (builders grade) lasted almost thirty years.
but wouldn't running the big boiler in the summer be very inefficient?
Intriguing approach to the issue FULLRANGEMAN. Will have to search for US distributors, and info as I'm unable to translate. Have you always had this unit(s), or do you have cost comparison experience verses a standard tank type heater ?
Dear Arthur,I will translate the text for you, If you post here or send me by PM.I feel there is various US brands of electric showers, or not?? IF are you saying there is no electric shower avaliable in US I am surprised. The instalation of this shower are fast, no more than 30 minutes, to change the resistance are ever faster, about 5 minutes, no mess, a spare resistance sells for 3 or 4 dollars.My actual electric shower cost me under ten(10) dollars and are 16 years old already. Seems to me a small gas heater price starts at 600 dollars here, only the heater machine. The special hot water copper tubes, and instalation costs are ever more expensives, and the quality of the service may not be great, as are need to hired people to install all this things.Regards, Gustavo
In the upper right hand corner of the posted website there is a link to english.
Love the idea of the Lorenzetti, but it could be a real mess to retrofit. In my five year old house (with 200 amp service and all 12 gauge/20 amp circuits) we may have enough circuit capacity, but to run wiring to 13 fixtures would be major.And I rather like having a (power vented propane) heating source in our finished basement here in the great white north.
If you don't want to be inconvenienced, a tankless is probably not for you. My tankless cost me about $600 a few years ago, and I did the installation -- I am no plumber. I hung it on the wall (~20 lbs.?), extended the gas line that was in place for the heater it replaced (screw fittings), added a few feet of copper pipe to connect with the existing inflow and outflow pipes, and enlarged the roof vent from 4" to 6" to handle the larger pipe (double walled spec'd). The unit I have requires no electricity at all; it has a wee turbine that creates the spark to fire the burners. Seems that electric units make the most sense only when located at the point of use, say under a sink, where you only need small amounts of hot water. To run a whole house unit, we want fire and want it now.
Just read through this thread and I'm not trying to be a smartass here, but ..... I guess you didn't get it inspected either.It appears you have a ground wire attached to one or both plastic water pipes. That won't work. All grounding has to be on a metallic pipe that is continuous to earth for conductivity, or wired to the exterior grounding rod by the electrical meter.
That grounding may be to ground the two copper pipes together, not to provide a house ground.
That grounding may be to ground the two copper pipes together, not to provide a house ground. I've done the exact same thing for my soft water system (that is, used a copper wire to ground the two copper pipes entering and leaving the soft water system otherwise, the copper piping after the soft water system wouldn't be grounded). And my house ground is at the meter entrance and directly into the ground. The NEC still (at least as of 2005, though I haven't checked the 2008 codes) still allowed grounding to piping entering the home. There were certain conditions on it, though, to avoid loss of ground.
I think you're looking at copper that's painted white. It may indeed provide a ground path. While commonplace many years ago, grounding to water pipes is no longer allowed by most codes, primarily because of the possibility that the pipe could be compromised somehow. On the other hand, if one is certain of the pipe's integrity and connection to earth, it can be viable.
Peter is correct, that's copper that's been painted. The ground wire was stuck there by an electrician when he changed the main panel on my house, and has nothing to do with the water heater itself.That said, thanks for bringing it up just in case.