 |
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Jul 10, 2009, 10:31 PM
|
|
Who Knew 50 gallon low boy water heater would deliver only 30 gallons of hot water
I have been told by State Industries that my (their product) 50 gallon electric low boy waterheater's performance is acceptable if it only produces 25 gallons before dropping 30 degrees from the set tempature. They said 60 percent of the stated size (50 gallon x 60%=30 gallons) is normal. The fact that mine only produces 25 gallons in the first year of ownership does not qualify for replacement. How much hot water should one expect out of a 50 gallon waterheater? I believe most people would expect more than 60% of the number on the tank. Per the certificate of product performance from AHRI the first hour rating is 55 gallons. Could someone please explain what that means? Any other suggestions? I plan to give this almost new waterheater to Habitat to Humanity and buy a better performing product.
|
|
 |
Eternal Plumber
|
|
Jul 11, 2009, 05:08 AM
|
|
You must realize that for every gallon of hot water you draw from your heater a gallon of cold water enters. The more hot water being drawn off the more cold water enters. Of course the water temperature drops the more hot water used.The good news is that as cold water enters the bottom element begins recovery. You will never get 50 gallons of hot water out of a water heater on a single draw. Regards, Tom
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Jul 15, 2009, 10:35 PM
|
|
Thank you speedball. Okay, so a 50 gallon water heater will not produce 50 gallons in one draw. But only 25 gallons before the temp drops 30 degrees (153-123)? These numbers came from a draw test suggested by State after setting the unit at the max. I would never set my w/h at that temp. Take 20degrees off those numbers above and you are talking a bath where you have to roll over to get wet and the 26th gallon is a cold 103 degrees. The supplier suggested adding another water heater. Imagine the cost of operating 2x50 gallon hot water heaters so you have enough water to come up over the jets. If there is not enough water in the tub it is like a Robo automatic car wash in your bathroom.
Thanks again,
BP
|
|
 |
Eternal Plumber
|
|
Jul 16, 2009, 05:41 AM
|
|
I found two general rules of thumb: 75% and 2/3. The capacity of the hot water heater needs to be at least 75% of the capacity of the whirlpool. If the whirlpool is 100 gallons the heater needs to be 75 gallon. In the second opinion the heater should be 2/3 of the capacity of the tub. If the whirlpool is 100 gallons the heater needs to be 67 gallons. HGow does yours stack up? Regards, Tom
|
|
 |
Plumbing Expert
|
|
Jul 16, 2009, 05:30 PM
|
|
If you heat up 50 gln tank to desired temperature, close incoming cold water valve ( meaning you isolate heated water from receiving any cold water as refill ) and drain the heater - you get close to 50 gln of hot water. That's why "50 gln" hot water heater. Otherwise, it is as Tom explained above in his response to your question...
|
|
 |
Expert
|
|
Jul 16, 2009, 06:32 PM
|
|
They are correct, I see no surprise at all, It should be fairly normal common knowledge that as hot water is used, cold water replaces it. So it starts cooling from the very first gallon used.
The gallon size is merely the holding ability, not how many gallons of hot water is available
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Jul 16, 2009, 07:32 PM
|
|
I also had problems w/my hotwater heater. w/4 girls in the house we never had enough hot water. A plumber friend told me about the tankless hot water heaters, but they are expensive. However I found a very affordable one at Lowe's. It's made by bosch and we are very pleased. It only uses energy when hot water is running and that keeps energy bills much lower.
|
|
Question Tools |
Search this Question |
|
|
Add your answer here.
Check out some similar questions!
Is a 60 amp breaker too much for a 40 gallon electric water heater?
[ 2 Answers ]
I had a tankless water heater installed and after a lot of trouble with it, it died. So, I want to go back to a regular tank water heater. Can I hook it up to the existing electric service to the tankless, which is really big: two pole 60 amp breaker with a 6 or 8 wire?
I have the feeling that...
40 gallon hot water heater
[ 1 Answers ]
I have a 40 gallon electric hot water heater in my apartment. The hot water runs out after a 10 minute shower, by the end of the shower I can turn the cold side all the way off and the hot all the way on and it is freezing cold. This is a new hot water heater (supposedly) because they replaced...
80 gallon vs 2 40 gallon water heater.
[ 1 Answers ]
I own a small motel that has two 40 gallon water heaters hooked up consecutively. They are about 20 years old. The furnace (hydronic heat) is hooked up to the water heaters as well and preheats the water before it goes to the 40 gallon tanks. I would like to replace the water heaters and was...
30 Gallon Hot Water Heater Relief Valve ?
[ 13 Answers ]
I just had the relief (release?) valve replaced on my Hot Water Heater because it was constantly leaking and dripping. The new one seems to work great because I don't see it dripping anymore. However, I kept a bucket under it to be cautious, and every day there is a little over a cup of clean water...
2 40 gallon water heater vs 1 80 gallon
[ 2 Answers ]
I am building a new house. I am considering installing two 40 gallon water heaters rather than one 80 gallon water heater. My thought is that I could turn one the 40 gallon heaters off as there are only two of us most of the time. Then we could turn on the other when we have guest. Is there a...
View more questions
Search
|