Forum Discussion
- LantleyNomad
deltabravo wrote:
Lantley wrote:
In an RV there is little need for unlimited hot water.
Unless you have a family and everyone needs to shower in a short period of time.
Tankless water heater info
More tankless water heater info
I have a 12 gallon gas/electric water heater. I have Never run out of hot water with 4 of us. For the most part an RV does not have unlimited water supply or waste water storage unless you are on a Full hook up site.
When on a FHU site you can heat water by electric which a tankless cannot do. My family can still shower on short order using the CG's electric power!
A tankless water heater in a RV is a man made marketing solution to a problem that does not exist! Lantley wrote:
In an RV there is little need for unlimited hot water.
Unless you have a family and everyone needs to shower in a short period of time.
Tankless water heater info
More tankless water heater info- LantleyNomadI'm still trying to understand the goal/point of a tankless RV water heater.
In a home you benefit from energy saving and unlimited hot water.
In an RV there is negligible energy savings and there is little need for unlimited hot water.
I'm not sure what the pupose or benefits of a tankless RV heater?
A tankless water heater requires less space otherwise I don't know any other pro's?
For the record I have a tankless water heater in my stix and brix house - rcliftonExplorerI’ve had the girrard (version 2) installed since Jan of 2017 in my travel trailer. My wife and I have loved it! It uses very little propane when running, mounts in the same opening as the old unit did (takes less space then the 6gal it replaced in fact).
Not sure what some of the other posters were going on about, it’s pretty easy to set the temp as it has a digital temp control. Find the number that works for you, set it and forget it. We use 107 degrees and it’s nice to get the exact same temp shower every time. As for ventilation, it obviously needs to be vented to the outside but since it goes in the old opening you’re fine, it doesn’t require any other ventilation aside from that. The poster that mentioned water pressure was partly correct. In the years we’ve had ours we have only encountered the problem twice tho, where the water pressure at a park was so poor that the water didn’t get hot. Simply turning on our water pump to supplement the flow from the park with additional water from our tank solved the issue both times. - markchengrExplorer IIMany of the newest RV's come with the Truma Aqua Go which gives instant hot water. It has a one liter reservoir of hot water so it doesn't need time to sense the water flow. I think it has become the new standard.
- Bird_FreakExplorer III know a few that have them but I don't know of any that like them.
- TurnThePageExplorerIn the past they required a pretty good water flow to actually get hot water. I don't know if that's still the case. I guess that's fine if you always have full hookups.
We like to go off grid. I'm not sold on them.
On edit: Sorry, that's not really what you asked. - philhExplorer IIif the tank version allows both energy sources, that is nearly unlimited anyway.
- valhalla360NavigatorWe had one on our boat and hated it. It was difficult to get the temperature set right. It would either scald or be ice cold.
Ventilation is a big consideration also that make it difficult. - dblrExplorerOur unit came with a tankless (Girard2) then while at a rally the manufacture switched it out to a Truma. Between the 2 I would recommend the Truma but from what I hear they require only that a Truma dealer install their unit.
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