Tankless water heaters

Elite-ist

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#25
What, you didn't WOPL the heater control, yet, Lee? Seriously, that should give you peace of mind for some time. Hot water is a necessary part of existence, like slow-cooked ribs.

Nando.
 

orange

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#27
My computer being on all night sometimes if I fall asleep without shutting down and the fact that I leave the 13" TV and DTV converter box on all night in the bedroom as a night light/sign I'm alive cost more money than hot water here...\

and I have my own washer and dryer.
 

laatsch55

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#29
Hi temp thermoplastic, sounds like THHN insulation...

The newer low-flow Water Pik shower head must be right in the middle of the preferred rate as it cycles a couple of relays pretty regularly. There is some overshoot on the hot side and slow recovery on the cold side, so the water temp is in a state of constant flux. The incoming water this time of year is 42 Deg so that doesn't help. I heated a lot of water and generated a lot of steam with Hot Oilers in the oilfield and out of all the things we did make consistent temp steam was a bitch, constatly on the controls, so I do understand how hrd this is to do on the fly...
 

Gepetto

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#30
Hi temp thermoplastic, sounds like THHN insulation...

The newer low-flow Water Pik shower head must be right in the middle of the preferred rate as it cycles a couple of relays pretty regularly. There is some overshoot on the hot side and slow recovery on the cold side, so the water temp is in a state of constant flux. The incoming water this time of year is 42 Deg so that doesn't help. I heated a lot of water and generated a lot of steam with Hot Oilers in the oilfield and out of all the things we did make consistent temp steam was a bitch, constatly on the controls, so I do understand how hrd this is to do on the fly...
I am amazed to see relays on the power switching too Lee. I would have assumed solid state for that job.
 

laatsch55

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#31
8-30 amp exactly like the ones we use on the 700 relay board. Resolution could be better I think...
 

laatsch55

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#32
I don't think the have Delta rate programmed quite right or their decisions pertaining to it..
 

laatsch55

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#37
I suppose a thyristor that can handle 30 amps AC is silly cheap[ compared to a 30 amp electromechanical relay...
 

Gepetto

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#39
I suppose a thyristor that can handle 30 amps AC is silly cheap[ compared to a 30 amp electromechanical relay...
certainly reasonable compared to the relay Lee. Even a 50A SSR is reasonable compared to an electromechanical relay.
 

laatsch55

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#40
True, buy those every day. Electric resistive heating elements have been around as long as el3ectricity, seems they would have a better way to transfer energy into water, microwaves come to mind as do lasers, would probably have to upgrade my 200 amp service....
 
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