CornerWrench
Member
I part time manage an old hospital built in 1913 but converted to condominiums in Central Montana. I have duct tape stories I'll share some other time but slowly I'm convincing them to spend money and upgrade some issues. This was my latest upgrade. We had a situation where we get constant pinhole leaks in the copper hot water lines in this room due to turbulence.(plumber explained it to me that way at least) So I had the local plumber come out and they replaced it with aqua-therm.
My question though is this circulating pump. It runs 24/7. I had a thermostat put on to shut it down(you can see it hanging near the pump. It just clips on around the copper) Unfortunately it shuts the pump down too often and complaints are coming my way on how long it takes to get hot water. So I'm thinking about a timer instead.
Would the pump be better off just running all the time?
Does a constant stop and start wear it out faster?
How much energy do you suspect that pump uses?
If it uses little energy and would last longer just running all the time I may just forget about it.
My question though is this circulating pump. It runs 24/7. I had a thermostat put on to shut it down(you can see it hanging near the pump. It just clips on around the copper) Unfortunately it shuts the pump down too often and complaints are coming my way on how long it takes to get hot water. So I'm thinking about a timer instead.
Would the pump be better off just running all the time?
Does a constant stop and start wear it out faster?
How much energy do you suspect that pump uses?
If it uses little energy and would last longer just running all the time I may just forget about it.