Can you share brand and price? |
I'm thinking of getting a tankless. I absolutely hate the inconvenience of running outnofnhot water abs am willing to pay to have hot water. In my house now we can't take showers and run the dishwasher. It drives me crazy. Thanks for the information op. |
I remember what I was doing during my long showers as a teenager and the water suddenly going cold would be a real downer. So cruel ![]() |
How old is your dishwasher? Modern ones use about 3 gallons per load, which is like a minute's worth of a typical shower. Have you looked at low-flow showerheads? I installed this one and it has changed everything: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09W3YJDYF . No problem with four adults taking showers with a 65 gallon tank. I was skeptical at first but no reduction in the quality of the shower. It's a lot cheaper to reduce your hot water usage than to increase your capacity. |
Why would you pay $600 to have it serviced because you have hard water instead of getting a water softener? Has no one suggested this?
For teenagers, regardless of your water heater, this works best. After enough time has passed, go down to the basement to where your water heater sits and slowly, turn the valve for the water line that goes into the heater, choking off the hot water supply. The kid will adjust the water to maintain the temp but it's a warning of what is to come. Close it off a bit more and keep closing it until they turn off the water. Don't be cruel, give them time to rinse the shampoo out of their hair, or whatever they might be doing. When the kid complains that the hot water just doesn't last, be sympathetic and suggest they plan better before taking a shower and maybe promise to look into it. This absolutely works and it's fun. Unlimited hot water is a recipe for a high energy bill with a teenager. it has to be limited. |
Why not just tell the kids to take baths instead of hour long showers? |
I would kill for a remote to turn the water on to start heating - it takes a full 90-120 seconds to get hot water from the tankless in basement to our master bath on second floor. But once it’s hot, it’s fabulous.
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We don’t have tankless, but when we did a gut remodel we installed a 2nd take upstairs just to service the bathrooms. We get scalding hot water immediately. It’s great for filling up the tubs and taking a super hot bath. |
Why do you want scalding water? That is dangerous and expensive. You can adjust the temperature down on the unit. |
I wanted tankless but am all electric and my house would have needed way more power to it in order to go electric. So far, a bigger tank has solved my hot water problems. |
That doesn't make sense - tankless hot water heaters don't run out of hot water. They have a cap of how much hot water they can produce per minute (usually 5 gallons) but that is plenty of capacity for filling a tub - most tubs are 40-45 gallons. Only issue with a tankless hot water heater would be running too many appliances at once - say the washing machine and trying to fill the tub (dishwashers don't use that much water) - otherwise you shouldn't have an issue filling a tub. |
Lol |
OP is pointing out why they still like the tankless. It was past tense— water would run out. |
Seemed like a reasonable suggestion. Who doesn't love a long soak? --new poster |
Meh. I have a huge hot water heater (needed for radiant heat that is no longer used). I'd rather have that than tankless. My Dad is a mechanical engineer and thinks they are a risk to use in a residential setting. |