Hi Everyone. Well, after 15 years the RV-Dreams Community Forum is coming to an end. Since it began in August 2005, we've had 58 Million page views, 124,000 posts, and we've spent about $15,000 to keep this valuable resource for RVers free and open. But since we are now off the road and have settled down for the next chapter of our lives, we are taking the Forum down effective June 30, 2021. It has been a tough decision, but it is now time.


We want to thank all of our members for their participation and input over the years, and we want to especially thank those that have acted as Moderators for us during our amazing journey living and traveling in our RV and growing the RV-Dreams Family. We will be forever proud to have been founders of this Forum and to have been supported by such a wonderful community. Thank you all!!

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Tankless Water heater.


RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 159
Date:
Tankless Water heater.


Okay,  I love my long hot showers.  I think that will be the thing that I will hate to give up the most when we buy our 5'er.  

That said we have a tankless water system in our house and love it!  Never run out of hot water, and no big water tank to worry with.  It also uses less energy than the old tank one did. SOOO I found a tankless water heater built specifically for RV's and the new ones are four seasons so it should not freeze.  Does anyone have one installed?   or have you seen one that has been installed.   I am willing to retrofit our 5'er when we buy it with one as long as they work.

Here is a link to it   http://www.precisiontemp.com/rv-and-trailer/rv-550-wall-vented-tankless-water-heater-for-rv-and-trailer/

Wendy  still waiting for the farm to sell.  Which will not happen until next year now since we took the signs down fir the winter



__________________


RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 3721
Date:

The people I know with Precision Temp tankless hot water heaters are very happy with them. Other brands, which are cheaper, not so happy. The Precision Temp's advantage seems to be keeping the water temperature consistent, which is the downfall for cheaper models. You will want a sewer connection if you want to take long showers, otherwise you will fill your grey tank quickly.

For us with a motorhome and a fixed propane tank, these are not a good option since it takes planning and a hassle to get propane. We will live with the limits of our 10 gallon electric/propane hot water heater.

__________________

Bill Joyce,
40' 2004 Dutch Star DP towing an AWD 2020 Ford Escape Hybrid
Journal at http://www.sacnoth.com
Full-timing since July 2003



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 40
Date:

I too love my long hot morning shower!  We boondock 6 months of the year on our property in Utah.  We are at 10,000' altitude and high temps in the summer are 55 with lows dropping into the teens.  We have a 6 gallon water heater and a 60 gallon water tank.  Even with the temps dropping so low I never ran out of hot water. To conserve energy, (no electricity on our mountain, we ran off batteries) we did shut off the water heater at night.  No problem to just  make turning on the water heater first thing in the morning and by the time I got the bed made and dog walked I had hot water.  We have to haul in our own water and knew we would need to conserve whenever possible.  Hubby knew upfront that my morning shower and shampoo wasn't going to get cut, non of those quick off/on military showers for me.  (If I had to choose between the lifestyle and the shower, I'd choose the lifestyle, just glad I didn't have to)  I don't know why we were so lucky but we had more than enough hot water. AND  I am lucky to have a husband who understands!  (2013 Keystone Cougar MKS333).  Kate



__________________

Steve and Kate

Aspen Ridge



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 1756
Date:

Like Bill, we've heard mixed reviews on these tankless water heaters from other RV'ers we've talked to. And I do love my long, hot showers so we've compromised a bit. I've learned to take quick showers when necessary, but if we're somewhere with clean shower facilities or FHUs, I take long, hot showers. It gives me something to look forward to!!

Recently we've stayed at 2 different Maricopa County parks (Phoenix area) and they have some of the cleanest shower facilities I've seen in either state or county parks. As I read reviews on RVParkreviews.com I look at the comments on the shower facilities, it helps my decision making on where to stay. We tend to stay at state park / county parks more often than RV Parks with FHUs as we enjoy more space, quiet and privacy so I've gotten a bit more picky about where we stay.

I honestly don't mind not having a long hot showever every single day, but I do look forward to it and probably appreciate it more now that I can't take it for granted all the time. And tonight? After a more difficult work day than usual and being at an RV park with a hot tub??? Oh yeah, enjoyed it even if it's not a peaceful setting that I would prefersmile 

Learn to enjoy the trade offs of different RV camp locations / experiences, they all have something different to offer.



__________________

FT - July 2013

 

2010 38TKSB3 DRV Mobile Suites

2012 Ford F450

 

Dale and Ruth Travelling with Tazzy Kat!

 

IMAG0142_zps070d30d8.jpg

 

 

 

 



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 486
Date:

WendysPhotos wrote:

Okay,  I love my long hot showers.  I think that will be the thing that I will hate to give up the most when we buy our 5'er.  



 Wendy, you might want to wait until you actually have your 5'er to see if you really even need a different water heater.  We have an 8 gallon propane-only unit and never seem to run out of hot water, even with extended showers.  The water temperature is so hot in those units that you're actually using a small portion of hot water mixed with cold water to be able to keep from scalding yourself.  That way the 8 gallons goes a really long way. Leaving the unit on while you're showering also means that more water is being heated while you're showering. As Bill Joyce said above though, you will definitely need a sewer hookup if you take extended showers... you'll fill up your gray tank in just a day or 2 otherwise.



__________________

Ron and Joan
2005 Itasca Sunova 34A
2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland

Fulltiming since 3/28/12

"With change comes opportunity"



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 5398
Date:

On the other side of the comments, I think we have a 10 gallon hot water heater in our Mobile Suites.  That is plenty for either of us, but if I decide to take my shower after Jo takes hers, I usually need to be able to let the hot water heater "catch up."  If we are both showering just before work, we barely have enough hot water for the two showers.  However, I have learned something....I think.  We usually let the electric heater side do the work as our propane costs here are fairly high ($3.05 per gallon the last fill-up), but if I want to extend the hot water, I can also turn on the gas side and let both gas and electric heat the water.

I've not fully studied the tankless hot water heaters, but one thing concerns me.  That is that it seems that the system would have to have a lot more burners so it could heat the water as it flows through the heater.  I would think that used more gas, and with more burners, it might have better opportunities for fires.  Can anyone address that "concern" to indicate that the tankless systems are safe?

Terry



__________________

Terry and Jo

2010 Mobile Suites 38TKSB3
2008 Ford F450
2019 Ford Expedition Max as Tag-along or Scout

Our photos on Smugmug



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 194
Date:

I have looked at the tankless hot water heaters for my house and my 40 gallon hot water heater uses about 30,000 BTUs and a tankless hot water heater can use over 130,000 BTUs but it does not have to store hot water because it is tankless, also I have been told that when you turn the hot water on you have to move about 1 gallon of water before it will start to heat the water, so you can get spurts of hot and cold water and if you just need a little bit of water you will have to move about 1 gallon of water all over again because there is no tank of hot water sooo, I just gave up looking,  LOL!!!!

Lonney



__________________

Lonney & Angel and our fur kid a Sheltie (Wyatt)
2010 Chevy Silverado 2500 HD 4x4 Duramax    

2010 Keystone Everest 345S 37' 5th wheel
50 gal. Aux Fuel Tank

Rear 5000 pound Air Ride

25K Air Safe Hitch
Powerupdiesel tuner or EZTurner

  

 



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 182
Date:

Terry, Surprised that you can not both take a normal shower without running out of water. My wife and I both take normal showers (sometimes longer than normal) and still have have hot water left. We run on electric all the time and have never run out of hot water. I would assume that we both have the same water heater.

Have a Merry Christmas
Dave

__________________

http://buckstravelnews.wordpress.com/

 

Dave and Marge

2005 Freightliner M2 Sport

2008 36RSSB3 Mobile Suite



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 2950
Date:

One would have to define "Normal"........if you could do that it would open the secrets of the universe!!!

ones simple shower could be a spa treatment to another....

__________________

 1998 ...Harney Renegade DP  class A

rers1@mail.com

 

My Service dog and life partner " Nikki"......Klee Kia Miniature Husky....(she Runs the ship!!)

We are not lost in the Woods.....Just Extreme boondocking!!!!!!



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 3721
Date:

Lonney Wade wrote:

I have looked at the tankless hot water heaters for my house and my 40 gallon hot water heater uses about 30,000 BTUs and a tankless hot water heater can use over 130,000 BTUs but it does not have to store hot water because it is tankless, also I have been told that when you turn the hot water on you have to move about 1 gallon of water before it will start to heat the water, so you can get spurts of hot and cold water and if you just need a little bit of water you will have to move about 1 gallon of water all over again because there is no tank of hot water sooo, I just gave up looking,  LOL!!!!

Lonney

 

Eliminating spurts of hot and cold water is why the Precision Temp is more expensive than a normal tankless hot water heater, it has more electronics and manages the water temperature better.  I don't think anyone bothers to make such a fancy unit for houses, but it would cost more.  Even with a normal hot water heater you have to wait a bit for the hot water to get to the tap, so the extra gallon on startup in a home unit is probably not noticeable.   Friends with tankless systems say they do save energy.  



__________________

Bill Joyce,
40' 2004 Dutch Star DP towing an AWD 2020 Ford Escape Hybrid
Journal at http://www.sacnoth.com
Full-timing since July 2003



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 159
Date:

On the tankless house Water heaters: It depends where yours is. Ours is placed between the kitchen and the main bathroom. It takes less than a min to get hot water. Even with a tank water heater you have to move all the water in the lines before you get hot water. It also depends where in the country you live. Here Natural Gas is cheap. We save about 20 -30 a month on the gas bill with tankless, because it does not have to keep a tank heated all the time. BTW tankless is VERY common in Europe. Just now getting to the US.

On the RV. I guess I should say about my long hot showers. I loves 15 to 20-25-30 min showers in 'scalding' water. My hubby has no idea how I can stand it that hot. It scalds him. I know this is not an option in the RV. So we will probably start out with the regular tank heater and if it is not good enough we may retro fit. I will look forward to campgrounds where I can take a long hot shower though, although in my experience even when in a condo vacationing the water is not hot enough. I will adapt though, because you adapt to your new lifestyle and this is not a big enough issure to stop our plans.

__________________


RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 2074
Date:

WendysPhotos wrote:

On the RV. I guess I should say about my long hot showers. I loves 15 to 20-25-30 min showers in 'scalding' water. My hubby has no idea how I can stand it that hot. It scalds him. I know this is not an option in the RV. So we will probably start out with the regular tank heater and if it is not good enough we may retro fit. I will look forward to campgrounds where I can take a long hot shower though, although in my experience even when in a condo vacationing the water is not hot enough. I will adapt though, because you adapt to your new lifestyle and this is not a big enough issure to stop our plans.

Wendy:

They do make 16 gallon RV hot water heaters.  If I were you I would consider them based on your criteria.  They will “scald you” if you like.  We did a reasonable amount of research about tank-less when spec-ing out our new rig.  They would install “whatever you want,” whatever brand we wanted - just tell them and they would do it.  Short story, from our research we opted to go with a 12 gallon “standard” RV unit and think that was the best decision for us considering how much we travel among other criteria.

Bill

 



__________________

Bill & Linda



RV-Dreams Family Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 5398
Date:

Lonney Wade wrote:

I have looked at the tankless hot water heaters for my house and my 40 gallon hot water heater uses about 30,000 BTUs and a tankless hot water heater can use over 130,000 BTUs but it does not have to store hot water because it is tankless, also I have been told that when you turn the hot water on you have to move about 1 gallon of water before it will start to heat the water, so you can get spurts of hot and cold water and if you just need a little bit of water you will have to move about 1 gallon of water all over again because there is no tank of hot water sooo, I just gave up looking,  LOL!!!!

Lonney


 

I had never learned what the btu differences were, but that is a significant difference, especially in an RV where your gas supply is limited.  However, I am aware that Lonney's experience is based on his "home" hot water heater, not on for an RV.  Based on Wendy's desire of showers lasting from 15 to 30 minutes, I wonder how much propane would be used in that length of time?  Depending on the time of year, that could be cutting into one's gas supply for heating the coach.

As for more efficient use of energy, a tankless has to gain that by not heating during the day.  So, all one would have to do is turn off the hot water heater when one doesn't expect to need hot water.  Troublesome, yes, but in our case where we are gone 8 hours or more a day, it wouldn't really be a problem to get home, turn it on and allow time for it to heat water before using hot water.

Terry



__________________

Terry and Jo

2010 Mobile Suites 38TKSB3
2008 Ford F450
2019 Ford Expedition Max as Tag-along or Scout

Our photos on Smugmug

Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us