OurTown
Well-known member
We were going to replace the old 399,000 BTU boiler several years ago but never got around to it. We are doing a major remodel of our wash now and want the floor space for more equipment and chemical storage. If we put the 60 gallon stainless storage tank where the boiler is now then we can install a 199K tankless type water heater above it on the wall. The current boiler is overkill (I have been running it in stage one on the gas valve for years) for only three SS bays only using it for wax and soap and I'm sure the boiler is in the 80%-ish efficiency rating. The separate heater, pump and tank seems to make the most sense to me because you can replace each component separately and it utilizes my SS storage tank that is only 5 years old. It is not a heat exchanger type tank so keep that in mind. Lots of questions on this:
Should we run the tankless heater temp really high (130F?) and install a mixing valve to get the temp down (110F?) to the gravity pump feed tank? What mixing valve to use if we need a max of around 11 GPM flow to gravity tank?
Would you need some type of controller to kick on the circulating pump? Can any tankless water heaters do that? I though I saw that some had some type of remote. Maybe we just need a relay for the pump and my tank thermostat would would control that? Assuming we have a mixing valve with temps state above then should we set the tank stat to kick the pump on at 110F and off at just below the water heater set temp? (128F?)
What pump to use? Do these water heaters need some pressure to get them going? Would you try to match the highest flow that the heater can put out the max temp rise at the minimum expected inlet temp?
Years ago I found that some Navian heaters can be used in unrestricted mode (I think they call it commercial mode) and wonder if that would help with pump flow sizing. It does void the warranty though.
I'm sure I'll have more questions as answers come in. We are having a plumber do this but want to give him some direction. I'm just not sure how familiar he is with all this. Normally I do all the plumbing but we will have other inspectors in throughout our project.
Should we run the tankless heater temp really high (130F?) and install a mixing valve to get the temp down (110F?) to the gravity pump feed tank? What mixing valve to use if we need a max of around 11 GPM flow to gravity tank?
Would you need some type of controller to kick on the circulating pump? Can any tankless water heaters do that? I though I saw that some had some type of remote. Maybe we just need a relay for the pump and my tank thermostat would would control that? Assuming we have a mixing valve with temps state above then should we set the tank stat to kick the pump on at 110F and off at just below the water heater set temp? (128F?)
What pump to use? Do these water heaters need some pressure to get them going? Would you try to match the highest flow that the heater can put out the max temp rise at the minimum expected inlet temp?
Years ago I found that some Navian heaters can be used in unrestricted mode (I think they call it commercial mode) and wonder if that would help with pump flow sizing. It does void the warranty though.
I'm sure I'll have more questions as answers come in. We are having a plumber do this but want to give him some direction. I'm just not sure how familiar he is with all this. Normally I do all the plumbing but we will have other inspectors in throughout our project.