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14th March 2008, 02:43 PM #16Awaiting Email Confirmation
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- Sep 2007
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- Northern Brisbania...
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Dear Smurf,
You and I can both see that, but do you think those clowns in State Government up here thought about it when they came up with this whole ill-conceived "Post-2010 Phase-Out of Domestic Electric Hot Water Systems" krap?... The whole issue is an utter nightmare, especially for old unit blocks that don’t have gas yet, nor anywhere to put any small individual gas storage units that might get around the massive water wastage that is going to result from the en-masse uptake of instantaneous gas units. And as you have said, more gas will be burnt anyway because the required hot water flow rates will have to be higher for the instantaneous units than with mains-pressure storage heaters...
Utterly crazy, hey...
Best Wishes,
Batpig.
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14th March 2008, 09:05 PM #17Senior Member
- Join Date
- Jul 2007
- Location
- Sydney-south
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- 333
IMHO, the best way to go for HW is a reticulated system off a gas storage HWS. They dont use much more gas than a rinnai, and the circulating pump uses bugger all energy.
Should I ever be fortunate enough to actually build my own place it will be flow & return off a gas storage HWS.
Only draw-back is the cost of initial installation gets up there but man its worth it.Plumbers were around long before Jesus was a carpenter
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15th March 2008, 11:00 AM #18Awaiting Email Confirmation
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- Sep 2007
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- Northern Brisbania...
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- 0
Dear Wonderplumb,
That one makes a lot of sense, but I'm a bit worried about the heat loss in all of that pipework, because the pipe runs would all have to be external in my situation - possibly as much as even 30m of it - and the hotter something is, the quicker the heat radiates out from it. Even if it was all lagged, it would still be like a big oil-heater, heating up the outside world for everyone to enjoy (unless it was summer...) But it does make a lot of sense, because as Smurf has implied, removing the restrictor in the shower head to get hot water flowrates above the required minimum for an Instantaneous, will just mean that the advertised efficiency gain from the Instantaneous over the Storage will be fretted away, either in part or possibly whole. And you wouldn't have all of that on/off toggling krap going on either...
You know what would be good?... an automatic recirculation pump - ie. where you didn't have that constant heat loss from continuous circulation, but you didn't have to press a button like you have to on a Chilli Pepper or a Water Guardian either. All you would do was turn a hot water tap on, and the sudden flow was sensed electronically, and if the water temperature was less than about 40deg, the water was automatically pumped back to the tank along the return line until 48deg or so had been achieved, whereupon a valve was opened permitting flow to the house or flat, and the pump was turned off - all automatically... I might start another thread on it, because your idea of MP Gas Storage solves so many other issues.
Many Thanks,
Batpig.
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15th March 2008, 11:05 AM #19Senior Member
- Join Date
- Feb 2008
- Location
- Kingscliff NSW
- Posts
- 12
Looked at one of those "instant heat" units for my hws. (Dux quick recovery gas)
They wanted over $1000 for it
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15th March 2008, 01:20 PM #20Senior Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2007
- Location
- Adelaide
- Posts
- 274
Instantaneous HWS
I think you're missing the point of the unit - you don't use the shower's cold tap when using one.
Set to 30 degrees and let it supply you with 9 litres a minute of 30 degree water.
I love our Rinnai 26 Plus instantaneous HWS and can see a significant decrease in gas costs since I changed over from the gas storage unit.
CheersJuan
"If the enemy is in range, so are you."
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16th March 2008, 08:34 PM #21Senior Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2007
- Location
- Hobart
- Posts
- 139
I wonder if the Qld government realises that water consumption will certainly rise with these units? Every time you turn on the tap, several litres are wasted before hot water comes out of the unit (in addition to having to run it through the pipes). That's not necessarily a reason not to use them but it's clearly a case of less power, more gas and more water being needed.
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16th March 2008, 08:44 PM #22Awaiting Email Confirmation
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- Sep 2007
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- Northern Brisbania...
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- 0
ummm........................NO!
Does that answer your question regarding the IQ of our pollies up here?...
Listen, Smurf, while you're on line, would you mind popping down to this thread for a bit? (unless you're already down there...)
http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com...ad.php?t=68754
Thanks Muchly,
Batpig.
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17th March 2008, 08:08 AM #23Member
- Join Date
- Mar 2007
- Location
- BRISBANE
- Posts
- 36
I have a Bosch 17e instantaneous gas hot water system which I am happy with, $790 from my local pumbing outlet.
I understand the issue however with water wastage and was reading an article in fine home building (US publication) where the issue was not water wastage but water temp going hot-cold-hot between showers, with some elaborate plumbing and a very small electric hot water system/tank located in the bathroom they had a system that did not have the cold water (waste) and recirculated/recycled cold water sitting in the hot water pipe.
The truth, about electric hot water systems, gas we have and is cheap to pump around, spare capacity for electricity generation in queensland we dont have. Power plants are expensive to build and now politically damaging, because the cheapest solution is coal fired power stations = C02 or nuclear which has its own political and waste issues. This is why conserving electricity use, without necessarily conserving engergy appears to be the real motive behind switching off electric hot water systems.
Now I know many people on this forum will advocate for cheaper alternative power sources such as solar, wind, hydro, tidal power, however I fail to remember when the last time was that the mother earth donated any money to any political party. Until people realise that the air they breath and the food and water we consume maintains our life, and not interests rates as the top issue at an election I dont hold much hope for green energy providers. Not to mention that fact that the major oil and gas companies hold the patents for a lot of the green energy technologies, eg efficient solar. Every wondered why BP uses solar on its service stations, because by doing so it means they are "using" the technology in a commerical manner and this protects their patents on the technology.
Sorry about the rant!
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17th March 2008, 05:59 PM #24New Member
- Join Date
- Jan 2008
- Location
- Brisbane
- Posts
- 7
As a plumber I believe it is a legal requirement that all we install complies to the WELLS rating system. Removing flow restrictors from shower roses could put you into even more hot water (if someone reports ya).
When my mains pressure cylinder blew up I replaced it with a renai 20, big mistake. Now I run the hot basin tap while I shower to keep things cool in summer.If you are not part of the solution then you are the problem
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17th March 2008, 08:38 PM #25Awaiting Email Confirmation
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- Sep 2007
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- Northern Brisbania...
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- 0
Thanks MonkeyWrench, that makes three of you Plumbers (incl. Bricks and WonderPlumb) all confirming the issue...
I guess it would be fair to say that the units must have been great before WELS restrictors came in, but there's no way the manufacturer's haven't been getting adverse post-WELS feedback for a while now along the lines of what we've been discussing... So you've got to wonder - why have they been sitting on their hands? ...
Mains Pressure Storage - looks like you and me are going to be friends for a little while longer at least...
Cheerio,
Batpig.
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18th March 2008, 04:02 PM #26
I put this to my local SA water inspectors and if the fine print is read then you can actually remove the flow restrictor in a shower head where instantaneous gas heaters are installed. The reason being that the flow restrictor is to reduce the flow rate to under 10 lt/minute, ( for the wells rating) a gas instantaneous unit won't allow you to have more than that anyway. Plus the flow restictor is actually rendering the operation of the heater inefficient. That is the case apparently for SA, however you can now buy instant unit shower heads, so this may change. When you remove the flow restictor you also void your warranty on the tapware possibly?
If you dont play it, it's not an instrument!
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19th March 2008, 09:16 AM #27
For what its worth, we installed Rinnai 24 in the house we just finished about 6 years ago, and it has never missed a bit. We had flow restrictors in the shower and kitchen, and controllers in both. Bath controller runs from 37 to 50 and kitchen controller runs from 37 to 55. We all only use hot water, but have had no problem on hot days when mixing the hot and cold.
We also just installed a second bathroom controller with flow restrictor in the new ensuite and it also hasn't missed a beat. 4 people regularly showering, cleaning etc.
We will eventually retro-fit a solar system and use the gas system as a back-up.
Our energy costs have halved.
Our mains water flow into the house is around 30/35 lpm.
The house we have just moved into in Queanbeyan has a Rinnai 26 and also has flow restrictors, and as yet no problems. Although there are no controllers installed - something we will rectify as we renovate.There was a young boy called Wyatt
Who was awfully quiet
And then one day
He faded away
Because he overused White
Floorsanding in Canberra and Albury.....
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19th March 2008, 09:11 PM #28Senior Member
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- Oct 2007
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- Hobart
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- 139
If you use a heat pump then electricity is at least as efficient from fuel in ground to hot water at the tap. In most cases it is more efficient though not by much. Ordinary electric systems are a lot less efficient than either heat pump or gas however.
In terms of power generation capacity, if you run it on off-peak then you are NOT adding to peak power demand and thus not adding to the need for new power stations. All you are adding to is the need for fuel to run them - but that's comparable to gas if you go the heat pump option.
The exception is Tasmania where hydro-electric power generation by its nature is energy constrained rather than capacity constrained. That is, the limit is not the capacity of the turbines but the water to run them. So new schemes were built when total, as opposed to peak, usage increased. All of the Tas hydro schemes were built with capacity to use the water - they didn't add turbine capacity specifically to meet peak loads although in practice they ended up with enough anyway due to the nature of the water storages and thus the turbine capacity they needed.
All the mainland states have spare capacity in the middle of the night to run off-peak loads. Tas has plenty of turbines sitting idle at night but you'd still be adding to the water use which the limit on system capacity (and the system is fully utilised even with normal rainfall - Tas is a net importer of electricity from the other states). That said, Tas can access additional energy, as opposed to capacity, from the other states and from gas-fired generation without too much difficulty.
So from an efficiency perspective heat pumps or gas wins over electric. Solar with electric boost is a winner only if it will heat more than two thirds of your water - good in some places, not so good in others. Solar with gas boost would be more efficient than any of the others if the system works properly (I've heard some horror stories with these units however).
Financially, gas and off-peak are similar running cost for the energy. How you use it will determine what the actual bills are. Heat pumps and solar are cheaper to run as long as they're on an off-peak tariff.
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19th March 2008, 10:02 PM #29Awaiting Email Confirmation
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