Turn  on demand gas hot water heater to 140 degrees Turn on demand gas hot water heater to 140 degrees - Talk of The Villages Florida

Turn on demand gas hot water heater to 140 degrees

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Old 01-08-2025, 01:45 PM
CoachKandSportsguy CoachKandSportsguy is offline
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Default Turn on demand gas hot water heater to 140 degrees

and got nice 120 degree water at the shower, all the way on hot!

much nicer in the morning
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Old 01-08-2025, 02:31 PM
FloridaGuy66 FloridaGuy66 is offline
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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.
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Old 01-08-2025, 02:34 PM
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asianthree asianthree is offline
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Always start shower with super cold water, by the time warm water comes, I am done. Warm to hot water doesn’t do any favors to skin.
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Old 01-08-2025, 03:10 PM
jimhoward jimhoward is offline
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I increased the max water temperature, as others have done, because I wanted hotter water.

I have not noticed that having any effect on wait time however. Some people have said their wait time is shorter. I wonder why that would be. It should be set by the water pressure and the along-the-pipe distance from the heater to the shower head.

Is it just psychological or is the hot water wait time actually reduced if you increase the hot water temperature.
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Old 01-08-2025, 03:26 PM
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Arctic Fox Arctic Fox is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jimhoward View Post
Is it just psychological or is the hot water wait time actually reduced if you increase the hot water temperature.
Might depend on how well the pipe is insulated - with hotter water heating up the pipe more quickly whereas cooler water would continue to lose heat to the pipe for longer
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Old 01-08-2025, 04:18 PM
FloridaGuy66 FloridaGuy66 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jimhoward View Post
Is it just psychological or is the hot water wait time actually reduced if you increase the hot water temperature.
I actually compared mine when I bumped it from 120 to 135 based on the advice of a retired plumber that lives on my street. I was skeptical, so I wanted numbers to validate that it actually did anything.

I don't remember the exact numbers but it was around 60 seconds to warm up previously on an average day. Now it's closer to 30 seconds to hit maximum heat. This is for my master bedroom shower which is at the opposite end of the house from the on demand water heater.

I can get it to heat up even faster if I run the master bathroom hot taps at the same time.
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Old 01-08-2025, 06:55 PM
vintageogauge vintageogauge is offline
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I'm pretty sure that if you set them higher than 120 you void your warranty so if your heater is still under warranty, be careful. There's a reason they don't advise anything hotter than 120. I found that by turning on the shower before getting undressed it is fully hot by the time I get in it.
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Old 01-08-2025, 07:59 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by vintageogauge View Post
I'm pretty sure that if you set them higher than 120 you void your warranty so if your heater is still under warranty, be careful. There's a reason they don't advise anything hotter than 120. I found that by turning on the shower before getting undressed it is fully hot by the time I get in it.
From my waranty:

Damages, malfunctions or failures caused by operating the unit at water temperatures exceeding the maximum setting of the operating, or high limit, control.
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Old 01-09-2025, 12:03 AM
FloridaGuy66 FloridaGuy66 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by vintageogauge View Post
I'm pretty sure that if you set them higher than 120 you void your warranty so if your heater is still under warranty, be careful. There's a reason they don't advise anything hotter than 120. I found that by turning on the shower before getting undressed it is fully hot by the time I get in it.
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.
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Old 01-09-2025, 04:23 AM
Cuervo Cuervo is offline
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I'm reading this and you do understand that the temperature of the water differs on the preference of the person and if it's an issue of wait time turn the water on and brush your teeth.
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Old 01-09-2025, 05:18 AM
MikeN MikeN is offline
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Got ours set at 130. Makes a big difference
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Old 01-09-2025, 07:17 AM
RoboVil RoboVil is offline
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Quote:
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
Thanks for this tip!
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Old 01-09-2025, 07:26 AM
RoseyRed RoseyRed is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jimhoward View Post
I increased the max water temperature, as others have done, because I wanted hotter water.

I have not noticed that having any effect on wait time however. Some people have said their wait time is shorter. I wonder why that would be. It should be set by the water pressure and the along-the-pipe distance from the heater to the shower head.

Is it just psychological or is the hot water wait time actually reduced if you increase the hot water temperature.
just wondering the exact same thing!
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Old 01-09-2025, 07:37 AM
CoachKandSportsguy CoachKandSportsguy is offline
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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
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Old 01-09-2025, 07:44 AM
terryf484 terryf484 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Arctic Fox View Post
Might depend on how well the pipe is insulated - with hotter water heating up the pipe more quickly whereas cooler water would continue to lose heat to the pipe for longer
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.
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