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Is a tankless water heater worthwhile? Pros and cons if any?

Posted on 3/17/21 at 8:04 am
Posted by Codeasy87
Covington, LA
Member since Feb 2020
280 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 8:04 am
(no message)
Posted by Goldbondage
Member since Mar 2020
742 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 8:17 am to
If you need to save space in a utility room or get faster hot water somewhere then it makes sense. If you’re just looking for “efficiency” you can always get a hybrid.
Posted by jfw3535
South of Bunkie
Member since Mar 2008
5406 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 8:20 am to
All I know is that when I built my house and I was insistent on wanting a tankless b/c I'd heard that's the way you're supposed to go these days. When finding ways to cut costs and trim down my budget some, my builder questioned me on the tankless water heater. He told me tanked would save me money, that in his house (with a family of 6) he had 2 large tanked hot water heaters and they never had any issues with running out of hot water, even if all 6 were to shower back to back. He eventually convinced me to cut costs and get the 2 regular hot water heaters, and it has been fine. I've never run out of hot water or had any issues with them.

Perhaps there are other pros to the tankless I don't know about, but I'm perfectly happy with the 2 water heaters I have now.
Posted by Weekend Warrior79
Member since Aug 2014
20602 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 9:04 am to
Biggest pro for a tankless would be if your hot water needs are on opposite sides of your house. Also, if you have a deep soaker tub that gets filled a few times a week. With that said, my plumber told me that most dishwashers heating elements to heat the water before the actual hot water arrives. Another pro is in extreme cold weather, your water may have a shorter distance to travel, so it can stay at the temp you want.

I have a tanked water heater and the furthest point takes about 1 minute to heat. On the flip side, when we had those extreme cold temps in Feb, I couldn't get the water as hot as I usually like.
Posted by LSUtigerME
Walker, LA
Member since Oct 2012
3930 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 9:25 am to
Pros:
Continuous hot water, never run out
Arguably cheaper operating costs

Cons:
Requires electricity to operate
Minimum flow requirements
Requires descaling
Larger gas flow requirements
High initial cost


I have two tanks. If I did it again, I’d go smaller tankless for the bedrooms, and the single tank for the kitchen/spare bedroom side.
Posted by baldona
Florida
Member since Feb 2016
23303 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 9:41 am to
quote:

Cons:
Requires electricity to operate


So do tanked heaters too unless there's an option I don't know about that doesn't require electricity? Not sure how that would work though?

The major benefit for tankless is an endless supply of hot water and additionally if its for a portion of your house that rarely uses hot water. Such as a guest suite or if you don't have kids living there in a larger house that would normally require 2 tanks.

As said, for a family of 5 or less with normal water use I don't think its worth worrying about which one will save you money as the savings either way would be marginal.

ETA: The other benefit of tankless is it can be places on the exterior of your house so you don't need to take up interior space.
This post was edited on 3/17/21 at 9:42 am
Posted by Weekend Warrior79
Member since Aug 2014
20602 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 9:45 am to
quote:

So do tanked heaters too unless there's an option I don't know about that doesn't require electricity? Not sure how that would work though?

I do not have an electrical connection to my tanked water heater. Don't know if there is a battery connection or a continuous gas pilot light.
Posted by TheOcean
#honeyfriedchicken
Member since Aug 2004
45084 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 9:55 am to
Is a propane large tank water heater the best efficiency wise?
Posted by Codeasy87
Covington, LA
Member since Feb 2020
280 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 9:56 am to
Would this possibly increase a homes value?
Is the longevity of a tankless better?

Mine is on its last leg and its only my wife and I. Are we talking an upfront cost like $1-2K?
Posted by lsujro
north of the wall
Member since Jul 2007
4084 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 10:01 am to
quote:

Would this possibly increase a homes value?


i can't imagine tanked vs tankless would matter in home value. i've had both fwiw. loved the endless hot water of tankless, but it did take a very long time to get hot (no recirc in ours).

tankless probably $1,500 - $2k. as others have said, requires a bigger gas line than what you probably have at the location of tank. for the two of you, seems more reasonable to go tank imo.
Posted by Chasin The Tiger
Lake Travis, TX
Member since Sep 2012
618 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 10:09 am to
I'm doing a LP tankless in my home addition due to space. My plumber will be installing a recirculation pump to reduce the amount of time to get hot water to certain parts of the house. My current house I will continue to use the tank heater.
Posted by Codeasy87
Covington, LA
Member since Feb 2020
280 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 10:14 am to
Thanks all for the info. I appreciate it.
Posted by UltimaParadox
North Carolina
Member since Nov 2008
50831 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 11:17 am to
quote:

Would this possibly increase a homes value?


I am sure it is seen as an upgrade, but would not think it would add much

quote:

Is the longevity of a tankless better?


If you properly care for a tankless hot water heater it can last a very long time. And I found the yearly descaling process to be pretty simple, even compared to just draining the old tank style.

We made the switch from two electric hot water heaters to one single gas tankless. Energy savings was apparent to me, but if we already had gas hot water heaters I probably would have stuck with tank heaters.

Tankless hot water heaters while fast, still take a little time to heat up the water. So they are actually slower to deliver hot water than a traditional tanked.
Posted by BRich
Old Metairie
Member since Aug 2017
2734 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 11:52 am to
quote:


So do tanked heaters too unless there's an option I don't know about that doesn't require electricity? Not sure how that would work though?

quote:


I do not have an electrical connection to my tanked water heater. Don't know if there is a battery connection or a continuous gas pilot light.



Same. When the power went out for Hurricane Zeta we still had hot water; there is a continuous pilot light at the bottom. It's like gas stove tops or old gas ovens (the ones without new digital controls); power goes out you can still use gas to cook.

In fairness, however, on an earlier thread someone stated they ran the power supply for their (gas) tankless heater through one of those computer back-up batteries, which retained enough power during outages to run the electronics controlling the tankless heater.
Posted by BigPapiDoesItAgain
Amérique du Nord
Member since Nov 2009
3388 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 12:41 pm to
I have two Rinnai - One was in operation when I moved in, and when we added on to the house, I put one in on the other part of the house. We are a family of 6 - hot water is at a premium. Mine have always worked great and though it is only "instantaneous" at the taps closest to the heater, it is quick and a bottomless supply.

I like the space saving aspect as well - the old one is mounted to the outside of the house near the gas meter, and the new one mounted in a structured box in an external wall.

I do the maintenance myself - our municipal water typically runs about 110 ppm TDS, so pretty good in that respect - I just descale once a year on a Sat afternoon where I can turn the hot water off for an hour and that is done.

I never had a tankless before this house and had one incident with a flood of a tank heater housed in an attic in my first house - that was of course a huge PITA. I had no idea that tankless water heaters existed at that time in my life. Very unlikely this scenario would occur w/ a tankless (I know there is risk of burst boiler w/ freeze, but as long as electricity and gas is on, an outside one won't freeze above -4F supposedly).
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
86325 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 2:44 pm to
quote:

I just descale once a year on a Sat afternoon where I can turn the hot water off for an hour and that is done.
I doubt mine has ever been done. Do you notice any change after?
Posted by UltimaParadox
North Carolina
Member since Nov 2008
50831 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 3:57 pm to
quote:

I doubt mine has ever been done. Do you notice any change after?


Descaling a tankless is one of those things that you probably wont notice an issue until it it becomes a problem. As the scale build up usually only affects efficiency and sometimes will restrict flow

It is pretty easy to do, so seems like a no brainer. Honestly cleaning out the intake filter is another good thing as well. Takes like 2 minutes to do.
This post was edited on 3/17/21 at 3:58 pm
Posted by magicman534
The dirty dell
Member since May 2011
1794 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 5:45 pm to
quote:

All I know is that when I built my house and I was insistent on wanting a tankless b/c I'd heard that's the way you're supposed to go these days. When finding ways to cut costs and trim down my budget some, my builder questioned me on the tankless water heater. He told me tanked would save me money, that in his house (with a family of 6) he had 2 large tanked hot water heaters and they never had any issues with running out of hot water, even if all 6 were to shower back to back. He eventually convinced me to cut costs and get the 2 regular hot water heaters, and it has been fine. I've never run out of hot water or had any issues with them


We must have the same builder lol. I had the same exact scenario a few weeks ago. Opted for the in home generator over the tankless heaters
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
86325 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 6:34 pm to
Mine is in the attic with a sink under it. I just ordered a kit off Amazon, and will attempt before it gets 100 up there.
Posted by BigPapiDoesItAgain
Amérique du Nord
Member since Nov 2009
3388 posts
Posted on 3/17/21 at 6:52 pm to
quote:

Honestly cleaning out the intake filter is another good thing as well

I do that at the same time I do the de-scale. I not sure I notice a difference in performance - kinda like changing the oil in my car, doesn't run better, but will make it last longer.
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