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Turn on demand gas hot water heater to 140 degrees

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  #16  
Old 01-09-2025, 07:48 AM
Altavia Altavia is offline
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Originally Posted by FloridaGuy66 View Post
We set ours at 135 and it's decent enough. Almost no wait time. The default of 120 degrees is nuts. Would have to wait 5 minutes to shower.
Same here, a 120 setting results in a hot water temp of 105 in the master bath.

Removing the flow restrictor in the shower head helps get it there faster also ;-)
  #17  
Old 01-09-2025, 07:50 AM
Bill14564 Bill14564 is offline
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Originally Posted by terryf484 View Post
Watching homes being built near us, I never seen any of them put insulation on the hot water pipes. I guess that would cost them some of their profit.
Have you seen homes built elsewhere with insulation on the hot water pipes? I have not seen that in the homes I have occupied in NY, WA, or MD. (though to be fair, those would all now be considered older homes)
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Victor, NY - Randallstown, MD - Yakima, WA - Stevensville, MD - Village of Hillsborough

Last edited by Bill14564; 01-09-2025 at 08:02 AM.
  #18  
Old 01-09-2025, 08:01 AM
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Originally Posted by CoachKandSportsguy View Post
by laws of physics, the wait time would be longer with a lower temperature, due the heat loss in the foundation heat sink, think relative temperature for foundation absorption
What type of shower control do you have? Is it like most hotels where you adjust the temperature by turning the lever farther or is it like the one I have where you set the hot/cold mixture once and the main control simply turns the water on and off? With the set-once, hot/cold mixture control a higher temperature might result in a longer wait time due to a lower hot water flow. It would be interesting to try this if I had an instant hot water system.
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Victor, NY - Randallstown, MD - Yakima, WA - Stevensville, MD - Village of Hillsborough
  #19  
Old 01-09-2025, 08:17 AM
Marathon Man Marathon Man is offline
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Originally Posted by terryf484 View Post
Watching homes being built near us, I never seen any of them put insulation on the hot water pipes. I guess that would cost them some of their profit.
Underground piping is not insulated. The insulation would soak up water and become useless. And you wouldn't want insulation inside your concrete foundation. Greed not involved.
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Old 01-09-2025, 08:29 AM
Keithtama Keithtama is offline
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Default Thousands of gallons wasted daily

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Originally Posted by CoachKandSportsguy View Post
and got nice 120 degree water at the shower, all the way on hot!

much nicer in the morning
Inconvenient for sure but the water wasted down the drain daily is huge when multiplied by 1,000s daily.
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Old 01-09-2025, 08:46 AM
Bwanajim Bwanajim is offline
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Depends on how far your hot water tank is from your shower. Mines outside the garage. I turn on both hot water sinks in the bathroom to get it in quicker.
  #22  
Old 01-09-2025, 09:12 AM
jimhoward jimhoward is offline
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Okay I get it now. If your pipes are cold, the hot water wait time is not set by the time is takes for hot water to flow from the heater to the shower. The first hot water to reach the shower is not hot anymore because the thermal energy is used up heating up the pipes. So not until the pipes warm up is the water at the shower actually hot. This process is quickened by increasing the initial temperature of the water.

Interesting, I may need to increase my temperature a little more. I have it at 125 right now.
  #23  
Old 01-09-2025, 09:31 AM
dougawhite dougawhite is offline
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Problem with setting a high temp for an on-demand heater is the heater's minimum flow rate specification. Mine has a 0.7 gal/min minimum to keep running. With many shower heads that is more than half the flow rate. If you set the heater at 140 and mix with cold to get a 110 or so temp out of the shower head, that brings you very close to the minimum flow rate for the water heater. You may end up having the heater shut off, resulting in an all-cold shower.
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Old 01-09-2025, 09:44 AM
Birdrm Birdrm is offline
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Same here the first winter I started showering in my master bath and the water just never got to 120 degrees. I upped it to 130 and now it is just right on these cold days!
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Old 01-09-2025, 10:40 AM
rsmurano rsmurano is offline
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The water in the line between your hot water heater and your shower will get cold. Once your hot water starts to move to your shower, it has to flush the cold out, so thats why is takes minutes to get hot water to your shower.
The only I mean only reasons why you might realize it takes shorter time to get hotter water to your shower are:
1) at a higher temperature, the water in the pipes will take longer to get cold, so if you use the bath or shower within a short period of time then you will experience hotter water sooner. But if wait over night, 150/130/120 degree water will take the same amount of time to get hot water to your destination faucet,
2) you have a recirculating pump
3) at the same time you changed your shower head or strainers to restrict the water less. I put new a new shower head that has much better flow and I cut down the wait time in half or more. Same for ach faucet flow restriction screens, I got 10x more pressure and quicker heat times after doing this
  #26  
Old 01-09-2025, 10:50 AM
loufromnewjersey loufromnewjersey is offline
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My hot water is fine at 125
  #27  
Old 01-09-2025, 11:02 AM
Spianka Spianka is offline
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Default Instructions for raising Rheem max temp

Search for instructions on how to bypass factory settings of 120° on YouTube
  #28  
Old 01-09-2025, 11:14 AM
pauld315 pauld315 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FloridaGuy66 View Post
I would rather void my warranty and pay $900 for a new unit at an undetermined point in the future than deal with spending an extra minute standing around half naked everyday to avoid a cold shower for the rest of my life.

I would just set it back to 120 if anything happened anyways.
You need to price out the on demand systems and find out what they cost installed. I will be bet they are way more than $900.. I put one in a previous home and it was around $3000 back 15 or more years ago.
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  #29  
Old 01-09-2025, 11:17 AM
Rheinl271 Rheinl271 is offline
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Not sure changing the temp does anything, but if it works...

The higher the demand for hot water, the faster it heats. Running only the shower it will take about 2 -2.5 min to get hot water. If you turn on both hot faucets and the shower you get hot water in 30 seconds because then the heater shifts into high demand/high heat mode. The sink faucets run at about 1 gal per minute. So worst case, you're using 1.5 gallons to get hot water. So turn on the faucets and by the time you get in your birthday suit, you have hot water.

Removing flow restrictors probably has a similar effect, creating higher demand, higher heat mode. Not sure what effect it has on the water usage.
  #30  
Old 01-09-2025, 12:07 PM
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roadrnnr roadrnnr is offline
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How do you guys get it to go above 120?

My controller in the Garage wont let me set it higher than 120

Never mind just found answer!

Last edited by roadrnnr; 01-09-2025 at 12:12 PM.
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