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hot water heater

2008FX4
Explorer
Explorer
I was wondering if there is a way to make the hot water heater stay on longer? I run it on LP.and we turn the water off while washing hair and body. But by the end of washing off the water is coming out cold.
TV: 2008 Ford F-250 FX4 6.4L Twin Turbo PSD
TT: 2011 Forest River Flagstaff 831RLSS
22 REPLIES 22

Caveman_Charlie
Explorer II
Explorer II
Hum,,, I never have a problem. You say you have been RV'ing for a long time. Have you had this problem in the past with other water heater on other RV's? Or, is this a recent issue with a new to you RV?
1993 Cobra Sunrise, 20 foot Travel Trailer.

2008FX4
Explorer
Explorer
nomad297 wrote:
By the way he worded this, I think the OP is under the impression that his hot water is timed -- that the water heater turns on when there is a demand and then turns off after a certain amount of time, giving him cold water. I am not sure he understands there is a finite amount of useable hot water, whether 6 gallons, 10 gallons, etc.

Is this the case, OP?

Bruce


No.
TV: 2008 Ford F-250 FX4 6.4L Twin Turbo PSD
TT: 2011 Forest River Flagstaff 831RLSS

2008FX4
Explorer
Explorer
Fishinghat wrote:
Since you've run out of hot water so quickly, it may be due to having the winterizing valves turned the wrong way. That causes the cold water to enter the top of the tank and almost immediately mix with or replace the hot water. So, check your valves.

Second, most experienced RV'ers take "Navy showers", where they turn on the water, get wet, turn off the water, soap up, then rinse off. This reduces the amount of water used considerably.


I think I have them right. There's no arrows saying off or on. So I have to guess.

And we take navy showers. I've been rving my whole life so I know that's just part of camping.
TV: 2008 Ford F-250 FX4 6.4L Twin Turbo PSD
TT: 2011 Forest River Flagstaff 831RLSS

nomad297
Explorer
Explorer
By the way he worded this, I think the OP is under the impression that his hot water is timed -- that the water heater turns on when there is a demand and then turns off after a certain amount of time, giving him cold water. I am not sure he understands there is a finite amount of useable hot water, whether 6 gallons, 10 gallons, etc.

Is this the case, OP?

Bruce
2010 Skyline Nomad 297 Bunk House, 33-1/4 feet long
2015 Silverado 3500HD LTZ 4x4, 6.0 liter long bed with 4.10 rear, 3885# payload
Reese Straight-Line 1200# WD with built-in sway control
DirecTV -- SWM Slimline dish on tripod, DVR and two H25 receivers

Fishinghat
Explorer II
Explorer II
Duplicate post. Sorry.
Holiday Rambler Navigator DP, Hummer, and Honda VT1100C Shadow

Fishinghat
Explorer II
Explorer II
Since you've run out of hot water so quickly, it may be due to having the winterizing valves turned the wrong way. That causes the cold water to enter the top of the tank and almost immediately mix with or replace the hot water. So, check your valves.

Second, most experienced RV'ers take "Navy showers", where they turn on the water, get wet, turn off the water, soap up, then rinse off. This reduces the amount of water used considerably.
Holiday Rambler Navigator DP, Hummer, and Honda VT1100C Shadow

calamus
Explorer
Explorer
It is a Water heater BTW. The old ones you could set the temp hotter but the new ones are factory set there are a couple of way to pre heat your water like the other poster stated. They make a 110volt on demand water heater that pipes in line it helps or what we have up at the lake on our permanent camper is a roll of pex on the roof of the camper and I put a bypass in and quick connects so it runs through 50 foot of pipe on the roof the sun preheats the water and with a 10 gallon water heater I can take a shower for as long as needed.
2015 3500HD Chevy Dually Duramax, 2008 Sundance 2014 22'SSX bennington pontoon

2oldman
Explorer II
Explorer II
The water heater should be plenty if you preheat the water.
"If I'm wearing long pants, I'm too far north" - 2oldman