Meme: Sad Pablo Escobar meme moping around
Caption: Me waiting for the hot water to reach the sink every morning
If you have access to your water heater and some basic tools, a recirculation pump and a smart plug can be life changing.
For about $250 (pump plus smart plug) and an hour or so of your time, you can create a one-way loop that will refresh the water in the pipes and return the cold water to the water heater.
The loop is best located at the place in the house where it takes the longest to get hot water.
Youâll have to âsufferâ warm water in your cold tap, but using the smart timer to run only the time it takes to warm the water can limit that.
Gotta mention the downsides. Youâre gonna pay more for electrical/gas. Since youâre basically keeping your hot pipes full of hot water at all times. If youâre in an older house and those pipes are copper and in a crawlspace, exposed to 40 degree weather, thatâs gonna get cold pretty quick.
If you end up with access to old pipes I recommend a good insulation for starters. I insulated my own and my heat up time dropped from like 2 minutes to 30 seconds. Still quite a bit of time to wait but Iâd be spending a lot on constantly keeping that longer pipe full with hot water
Absolutely insulate too! Itâs really cheap and easy (if you have exposed pipes in places). Heck, I insulate my cold water in my attic because itâs otherwise a naked run in my attic and that sucks in the summer.
My CA weather privilege is showing (that said, energy and water are crazy expensive here too). Youâre making me recall all the hell I went through trying to modernize the 1922 house in MN 15 years ago.
I do wonder how much difference it really makes in energy since weâd be evacuating at least as much water from the tank that it would have to heat fresh anyway. We use the smart plug to set things up for time of use: 7am for showers, 11:30 for lunch, 6pm for dinner, etc. That way we can avoid a constant energy suck. I set things up for a 1-click run for the in between times too.
I didnât know that was a thing! Iâve been thinking of that exact same thing for years, wondering if it was even technically feasible and wondering why it wasnât a standard in new home construction. I canât imagine how much water is wasted by people just waiting for their showers to heat up.
Then again, my local water company recycles waste water from peopleâs homes. So maybe requiring it isnât necessary with modern water recycling programs.
Itâs a game changer. My smart plug lost its connection while I was messing with my router one day. I had forgotten how bad it was without the pump. Iâm in a warm climate so the heat gets paid for twice but I donât even care, itâs a luxury I am willing to pay for.
Is it weird with your cold water? Looking into it, it seems like it fills up your come water pipe with warm water. Wondering if that affects drinking water coming from your refrigerator or anything like that.
Thatâs my kitchen sink. Takes forever to get hot water but the bathroom (Which is further from the tank) takes half the time.
The joys of an old house.
Same here but Iâm in apartments that are less than 10 years old. So itâs not just old houses. Also poorly built apartments.
It has to run out of all the water that was sitting still between the output hole and the input source where itâs heated. If your apartment has a central water tank, that has its advantages - e.g. a whole family inside your place could take successive showers without ever running out of hot water - but this is the primary disadvantage to that, the wait to go through that cold water, which gets worse the further/higher up you are away from it.
Maybe try to find a way to not entirely waste it - like put some of that into a water kettle to be boiled for a hot drink? I enjoy such thoughts but do as you please ofc.
I am no plumber, just thought this might be interesting to know:-). I am 10,001% certain that someone will correct me here if I have said anything inaccurate. đ
Youâre correct, but I just want to point out that it isnât advisable to drink or cook with water that comes from your hot water tank. Hot water can (and usually will) corrode metal parts from your tank and plumbing and can be contaminated by all sorts of nasty stuff that wonât go away even if you boil the water first.
https://www.denverwater.org/tap/psa-dont-drink-or-cook-with-hot-water-from-the-tap?size=n_21_n
If you look it up on youtube, you can see for yourself the insane amount of crap that builds up inside a hot water tank over time. https://youtu.be/kAzKts6Wp1Q?si=UMPzHcIoSRdSgJ4g&t=88
Why does that happen? Is the pipe to the bathroom wider than the kitchen sink?
In my case itâs because the last several owners of this house were idiots that cheaped out on everything and thought they knew better than the professionals do⊠my plumbing is a wonderful variety of crap soldered to different crap that I think was partially salvaged from the Titanic or something.
And since Iâm renting, I have no ambition to rip anything out and fix it properly unless it breaks.
My kitchen is fairly far from my water heater, which is very close to every other hot water tap in my house. So when washing dishes I often have to run the tap to get hot water in the kitchen. In summer I run this water into my watering can for my garden. In winter I collect it in a jug and pour it into my clothes washer.
Same. Water heater is on the opposite side of the house from the kitchen sink. I have to run the sink for several minutes just to run the dishwasher, which is annoying as hell. I hate how much water have to waste just for the dishwasher to get hot enough to clean effectively.
You can fix the issue by installing a pump on your water heater, but thatâs a project that Iâm saving for when I need a new one in a few years.
Wait what ? I thought the vast majority of dishwashers had internal heating to avoid exactly these kind of issues
This depends on where you live in. AFAIK, in Europe dishwashers are not even hooked up to hot water, just cold. In America their standard plug electricity is weaker and therefore itâs not enough for a dishwasher to heat the water hot enough to sanaitze.
This is the reason electric kettles are not a big thing in America (they take significantly longer to heat the water) and âhome electrificationâ is a bigger deal there.
And as always, to anyone interested, Technology Connections talks about this in his videos on dishwashers, induction stovetops and kettles.
If you have the money, the most efficient way to solve this is to install an on-demand tankless water heater at every single outlet that has hot water (e.g., not the toilets). The downside is that this is a very expensive way to solve the problem; not only do you need to buy the water heaters, you need to run new electrical to every single one (or new gas lines, which would be even more expensive). The upside is that you get hot water as fast as a recirculating pump, but without the cost of constantly running a pump and your water heater.
Many years ago I lived in an apartment in San Diego that had recirculating hot water (there was no water heater in my apartment); I guess the apartment complex figured that the cost of constantly heating the water was cheaper than the cost of the water that they would otherwise lose down the sewer while people were waiting for the water to heat up in their apartment.
Recirculating pumps dont have to run constantly. Usually they are on a timer for when you most often need hot water, and the pumps arent that power hungry. For a couple hundred bucks a typical house can have one installed.
You have three issues - yeah, the pump doesnât use that much power, but it does use power. If youâre trying to reduce electricity consumption to the bare minimum, a tankless water heater right at the tap will be slightly more efficient. It doesnât have to always run, but for people that donât have predictable schedules, that can result in my wasted water. And your water heater is going to have to run more, because even with insulated pipes, youâll be losing some heat as the water circulates.
It is absolutely better than running the taps wide open until you get hot water, especially if you live in a place with limited water availability. I wouldnât use my solution for anything other than new construction due to the cost of running so much new wiring.
Thank you for the info, I had no idea this existed. Iâm going to install one when I redo my kitchen! Itâs so wasteful to have to wait 15s for hot waterâŠ
Dorms I live in rn get hot water within like 2 seconds I come from the country and fast hot water is fucking beautiful.