โApr-26-2020 10:10 AM
โMay-02-2020 02:38 PM
ajriding wrote:
Electric is cheaper for those that care.
Ele is free in campgrounds if you paid already.
The gas will create more exhaust heat than the electric element. The ele element is in the water so is closer to 100% efficency where the gas loses a lot of heat to exhaust fumes. The heat in the flu or chimney could cause acceleration of rusting or degradation of material. Unlike a refrigerator, the boiler has a very short run to the outside for the gas exhaust.
With gas you are heating the outside of the container (outside of the water) and you hear creaking and cracking. You hear less cracking with the electric. So, less metal expansion is happening, less metal fatigue overall with ele since the element is in the water and nothing gets over 180 degrees in the entire ele process.
Thank you:
That is exactly the information I was looking for. I see it more and more on this forum: "misinterpret what the question is, instead of reading the black part"!!
Think about this in relative terms, not stringent scientific terms as I know people will want to argue as if this were a scientific journal...
โApr-29-2020 03:28 PM
โApr-28-2020 09:30 AM
โApr-27-2020 07:43 PM
ajriding wrote:
oldbiscuit and okhmbldr, neither of those statems makes much sense.. Can you explain?
Turn on electric once per week, run propane the rest of the time??? We will just keep on walking on that one..
6 gallon an hour recovery time? The heck does that even mean? recover time? he is heating water only.
These little 6 gallon heaters can heat water in 10-20 minutes. I dont think OP is in a race. He is just wondering which one to run. Most have suggested electric.
โApr-27-2020 06:33 PM
โApr-27-2020 05:17 AM
โApr-27-2020 04:37 AM
2chiefsRus wrote:
I use electric when it is included in the price of the campground. I use propane when electric is not included and propane is readily available. I only turn on the water heater about 30 minutes before I plan to shower or wash clothes. Normally stays hot enough the rest of the day.
โApr-26-2020 05:55 PM
ENG2242 wrote:
Problematic....
Well, as I stated/implied. are there any potential mechanical issues that may develop as a result of using either/or after a prolonged period of time. This is my 10th RV, so I am familiar with them. I've just never lived in one full time. I have a 250lb propane tank, so that's not the issue. Once again, is either/or going to cause parts failure over the other after pro longed use. I'm now being redundant in an attempt to clarify a fundamental question.
Regards,
David
โApr-26-2020 05:38 PM
โApr-26-2020 05:20 PM
โApr-26-2020 05:10 PM
โApr-26-2020 05:07 PM
โApr-26-2020 11:44 AM
โApr-26-2020 11:25 AM