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Tankless water heater

thefishingal
Explorer
Explorer
Looking for recommendations for tankless water heaters. So many to choose from.
We are full time 38 ft 5th wheel.
Thanks in advance
14 REPLIES 14

rbcamping
Explorer
Explorer
Just curious if anyone has ever swapped out the electric element for a 220 volt element and modified the wiring for it? Should put out double the wattage.

MikenDebbie
Explorer
Explorer
The suburban tankless that came in my Montana has been great.
Mikendebbie
19 Chevy 3500HD High Country 4x4 D/A
2018 Montana 3921FB

ToddD
Explorer
Explorer
Truman, Truma, Teuma. Lol.

FYI, you can only buy the Truma installed, they don't sell the parts alone.

But it is supposed to be the gold standard of RV on-demand. They also have a circulating model made for cold weather, to keep it from freezing up. Their BTU ratings are much higher than the competition, too.
Todd
2018 Jayco 377RLBH
2019 Ford F-450 Platinum

RollandB
Explorer
Explorer
A friend is really happy with his Teuma AquaGo.
2013 Yukon

2021 Coachmen Spirit 1943RB

thefishingal
Explorer
Explorer
My husband talked the the folks at Truma. They said it’s @1700 installed. Think we are going to put the same on back in for now and then save up for an in line. Thanks for all your help. You all are such a blessing

Lexx
Explorer
Explorer
The reviews I've seen for the Truman AquaGo have been very positive. Folks are saying even though it's propane only, it uses very little propane.

Our 6 gal Atwood water heater only yields about 9 min max of hot water. That doesn't work when we have 5 people who need a shower.

I'm going to be swapping the Atwood out for the Truma AquaGo when we get back from our summer trip.

We primarily travel in the summer months and the temp rise is not very big so this unit will be ideal. We just had our rv propane tank filled for the first time. It was in the $21 range and that was in Canadian money - hardly a big expense.
2017 Ruby Red Platinum F450 - my kids call her "Big Red"
2018 Grand Design Reflection 28bh

ScottG
Nomad
Nomad
valhalla360 wrote:
You can get them in electric or propane variants.
- Electric struggles with creating enough heat to keep up with a decent flow of water. Think about it, if you have a 5gal/min flow rate, it needs to heat a 5 gal bucket of water from 50F to 120F in 1 minute. Most RV's and Campsite electric posts can't provide that kind of power, so you get derated units that are very marginal.
- We had a propane version on our boat and it struggled to match the heat output to the flow rate. Below a certain flow rate, it would shut down and you got cold water. Then when you opened up the valve, it would get scalding hot for a second before settling back only to get cold when you turned it back down. Unless you have unlimited water so you could just leave the water running at a continuous flow rate, it just didn't work.


I've been watching for information on tankless systems for RV's and have not seen any that use 120V for heating. Please tell me what brand does so.

Thanks,
Scott

OP, there are many systems that work great for residential use but so far I have not read of any that get truly good reviews for RV use. Hopefully someday someone will come out with a winner.

Lynnmor
Explorer
Explorer
valhalla360 wrote:

- We had a propane version on our boat and it struggled to match the heat output to the flow rate. Below a certain flow rate, it would shut down and you got cold water. Then when you opened up the valve, it would get scalding hot for a second before settling back only to get cold when you turned it back down. Unless you have unlimited water so you could just leave the water running at a continuous flow rate, it just didn't work.


I just cannot see why anyone would want or need these things. What are they trying to accomplish? If the usual tank type can't supply enough hot water, it is time to re-evaluate your water usage.

valhalla360
Nomad III
Nomad III
You can get them in electric or propane variants.
- Electric struggles with creating enough heat to keep up with a decent flow of water. Think about it, if you have a 5gal/min flow rate, it needs to heat a 5 gal bucket of water from 50F to 120F in 1 minute. Most RV's and Campsite electric posts can't provide that kind of power, so you get derated units that are very marginal.
- We had a propane version on our boat and it struggled to match the heat output to the flow rate. Below a certain flow rate, it would shut down and you got cold water. Then when you opened up the valve, it would get scalding hot for a second before settling back only to get cold when you turned it back down. Unless you have unlimited water so you could just leave the water running at a continuous flow rate, it just didn't work.
Tammy & Mike
Ford F250 V10
2021 Gray Wolf
Gemini Catamaran 34'
Full Time spliting time between boat and RV

garyemunson
Explorer
Explorer
Be advised as a fulltimer, a tankless ALWAYS heats with propane, not the site's electricity. Not too bad for weekend campers but buying more propane all the time will get old.

Lexx
Explorer
Explorer
Truman AquaGo is what you want. It's made to replace the 6 or 12 gal Atwood in the typical fiver.
2017 Ruby Red Platinum F450 - my kids call her "Big Red"
2018 Grand Design Reflection 28bh

Dick_B
Explorer
Explorer
Can't think of the name now but there is a new one that has a bypass system so the water in the piping is always hot.
BUT unless your rig is in a permanent spot I can't see any advantage to going tankless. It's an RV!
Truman AquaGo as posted below. Yes, named after the former President.
Dick_B
2003 SunnyBrook 27FKS
2011 3/4 T Chevrolet Suburban
Equal-i-zer Hitch
One wife, two electric bikes (both Currie Tech Path+ models)

Splashers3
Explorer
Explorer
Make sure you have plenty of water pressure, otherwise the system won't work like you expect. Do a search and you will find where folks regretted the tankless or demand system.

When we ordered our 2019 Cedar Creek, we opted for the 12 Gal propane/electric tank.
2017 GMC 3500 Sierra Denali, C/C, D/A, DRW, w/40gal Aux tank, 18K B&W Patriot.
2019 Cedar Creek Hathaway, 34RL2 - w/Bells & Whistles and disc brakes
Traded 2009 Cedar Creek Silverback, GII, 32 WRL

ronfisherman
Moderator
Moderator
Moved from class C.
2004 Gulf Stream Endura 6340 D/A SOLD
2012 Chevy Captiva Toad SOLD