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-   -   Freezing Pipes or Pipes frozen could the Instant Hot Water Recirculator from RedyTemp work (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/53408-freezing-pipes-pipes-frozen-could-instant-hot-water-recirculator-redytemp-work.html)

[email protected] January 11th 04 08:14 AM

Freezing Pipes or Pipes frozen could the Instant Hot Water Recirculator from RedyTemp work
 
Since the RedyTemp Instant Hot Water Recirculator has temperature
adjustment capability using the adjustment knob on the front of the
instant hot water recirculator at www.redytemp.com By setting the
temperature to the lowest setting which would keep the water in the
pipes at barely warm temperature on the hot water recirculator,
wouldn't this be enough to stop the pipes freezing up during the cold
seasons and save water from dripping down the drain all night.

I've heard of pipe heating tape which uses electric to heat the pipes
so they don't freeze... wouldn't the circulation of water throughout
the system be more energy efficient compared to the electrical energy
which the tape is consuming?



Joseph Meehan January 11th 04 12:18 PM

Freezing Pipes or Pipes frozen could the Instant Hot Water Recirculator from RedyTemp work
 
It may or may not. It will not run the water to any part of the pipe
beyond the return valve. It also appears it would heat your cold water so
instead of have hot and cold, you would end up with warm and warm, until it
cleared.

It does not look like a product I would want. BTW the claim it does not
use electricity to heat water is at best a misrepresentation for those with
electric water heaters.

--
Joseph E. Meehan

26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math


wrote in message
...
Since the RedyTemp Instant Hot Water Recirculator has temperature
adjustment capability using the adjustment knob on the front of the
instant hot water recirculator at www.redytemp.com By setting the
temperature to the lowest setting which would keep the water in the
pipes at barely warm temperature on the hot water recirculator,
wouldn't this be enough to stop the pipes freezing up during the cold
seasons and save water from dripping down the drain all night.

I've heard of pipe heating tape which uses electric to heat the pipes
so they don't freeze... wouldn't the circulation of water throughout
the system be more energy efficient compared to the electrical energy
which the tape is consuming?






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