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Aaron Fude October 14th 07 08:12 AM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
Hi,

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?

Many thanks in advance,

Aaron Fude


Telstra October 14th 07 09:59 AM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
Brush your teeth in the basement
"Aaron Fude" wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi,

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?

Many thanks in advance,

Aaron Fude




dadiOH October 14th 07 12:09 PM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
Aaron Fude wrote:
Hi,

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about
30 seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm.
Is there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?


You brush your teeth with hot water? OK.

1. There is the device that is constantly circulating the water,
don't recall what they are called, someone else will.

2. You could add one of those instant hot warer electrical heaters in
that bathroom. Don't put out any volume but should be more than
adequate for the brushing of teeth and a cup of coffee.


--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico




JoeSpareBedroom October 14th 07 02:36 PM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
"Aaron Fude" wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi,

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?

Many thanks in advance,

Aaron Fude


Run the water while brushing your teeth and the hot water will be there when
you're done. If you're brushing for less than 30 seconds, that's not long
enough. You need to talk to your dentist.



Rick Blaine October 14th 07 03:18 PM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
Aaron Fude wrote:

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?


You brush your teeth with hot water? Hmmm.

You could install a point of use heater under the sink, or they sell
recirculating pumps that use the cold water line as a return. Neither will be
cheap and the latter has the drawback of making your cold water lukewarm.

--
"Tell me what I should do, Annie."
"Stay. Here. Forever." - Life On Mars

Not@home October 14th 07 03:38 PM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
I have a similar house, and here is what worked for me (I did this when
the bathroom walls were removed for a remodeling, but I think it could
have been done with the walls in place, although you would need access
to the top of your current supply line.

Install a second line between the top of your current supply line and
plumbed to the bottom of your water heater, forming a loop. Put a check
valve in where convenient to limit water flow to one direction. Put
insulation on the original line. The loop will be filled with hot water
so you will have instant hot water in the bathroom. When idle, there
will be slow circulation of water, rising in the insulated line, and
returning, slightly cooler, in the new line.

The advantage is there are no pumps, etc, to break. The disadvantage is
possible energy loss, in that you will be creating in effect a radiator,
which will allow heat into the house (since I air condition less than
three months of the year, I don't see this as a problem; it is actually
supplemental heating in the winter. If it was a problem, I would put a
shutoff valve in the line and give up my instant hot water during the
summer months). Difficulty of installation could be a problem,
depending on your house. When I had this done, the plumber had never
heard of it and actually invited some cohorts over to see it. They even
had a wager on whether it would work. It did.

I know you can find sites on the web selling pumps that perform a
similar function, but I like to try to keep things simple and avoid
extra equipment that has a potential to break.

Aaron Fude wrote:
Hi,

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?

Many thanks in advance,

Aaron Fude


Bob F October 14th 07 08:37 PM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 

"Aaron Fude" wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi,

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?


Run the hot water full blast into the tub until it comes out hot. Then use the
sink.

Bob



old dirtbeard October 14th 07 08:55 PM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
I have a larger ranch-style home with a similar problem -- very long runs
that can take a minute or more to get warm water, and then it gradually gets
warmer over another minute while it heats up a 100 foot of copper . For
appliances like the dish washer, it never would get hot water to it as it
would not run long enough to heat the lines..

The builder installed a 1/40 hp (1/2 amp) motor/pump and a timer and an
insulated return line to recalculate the hot water. I have it set so it
comes on before I get up in the morning and turns off after I leave for
work. It comes on again in the evening for a few hours and then turns off
for the night.

It works terrific. With the timer I am not circulating hot water 24 hours a
day. When it is running, the water is almost instantly hot. There are four
bathrooms and a kitchen in different parts of the house, so it would not
have made sense to try to install demand-style heaters in all of these
locations. There is a manual switch I can flip anytime to turn it on (doing
laundry during the middle of the day on the weekend, etc.).



Al Bundy October 14th 07 09:45 PM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
"Telstra" wrote in news:4711da5c$1
@clear.net.nz:

Brush your teeth in the basement
"Aaron Fude" wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi,

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?

Many thanks in advance,

Aaron Fude





You get the prize of the day for that one. I think my cat chuckled too.

[email protected] October 14th 07 10:09 PM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 


These may be worth a look.



http://ateliving.ecrater.com/category.php?cid=167258






Don Wiss October 14th 07 11:51 PM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
On Sun, 14 Oct 2007 10:38:05 -0400, "Not@home" wrote:

Install a second line between the top of your current supply line and
plumbed to the bottom of your water heater, forming a loop. Put a check
valve in where convenient to limit water flow to one direction. Put
insulation on the original line. The loop will be filled with hot water
so you will have instant hot water in the bathroom. When idle, there
will be slow circulation of water, rising in the insulated line, and
returning, slightly cooler, in the new line.


Exactly. I had this setup when living in a 5th floor walkup in Manhattan.
The high ceilings below made it the equivalent of living on the 6th floor.
So without such an arrangement it would have been a real long time.

I now have a four story house. I use the bathroom on the top floor. Now
that I'm paying for the hot water I only use it when taking a shower, and
then I do have to plan ahead to get it to warm up.

Don www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom).

HeyBub October 15th 07 12:43 AM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
Aaron Fude wrote:
Hi,

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?

Many thanks in advance,


Move the water heater to the third floor?



Don Wiss October 15th 07 12:51 AM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
On Sun, 14 Oct 2007 00:12:38 -0700, Aaron Fude wrote:

I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?


Here's a small heater for under the sink that you could use:

http://www.clage.com/produkte/Produk...aschbecken.php

Don www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom).

Edwin Pawlowski October 15th 07 02:19 AM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 

"old dirtbeard" wrote in message
The builder installed a 1/40 hp (1/2 amp) motor/pump and a timer and an
insulated return line to recalculate the hot water.



Does it recalculate it from quarts to liters?



Michael B October 15th 07 02:39 AM

Instant, I mean instant, hot water
 
When I was running new lines from my basement water heater,
I used a half inch line to the tub, and 1/4" lines to the separate
fixtures such as toilet, cold faucet, hot faucet. With each line
coming from the water heater, rather than branching off at the
bathroom.
It resulted in being able to have the toilet be flushed without
causing the shower to get hotter, and the hot water shows up
a lot quicker to the faucet. After all, it's an issue of clearing
out the cooler water, and with less volume, it takes less time.
With the smaller orifices of water-conserving fixtures, I've not
seen a problem with inadequate volume for tooth brushing, etc.


On Oct 14, 7:51 pm, Don Wiss wrote:
On Sun, 14 Oct 2007 00:12:38 -0700, Aaron Fude wrote:
I have a three story house with a water heater in the basement. I go
to the bathroom on the top floor to brush my teeth. It takes about 30
seconds or more for the water out of the faucet to become warm. Is
there a robust solution that would shorten that time to about 5
seconds?


Here's a small heater for under the sink that you could use:

http://www.clage.com/produkte/Produk...aschbecken.php

Don www.donwiss.com (e-mail link at home page bottom).





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