Hot Water Heater Advise

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fwman

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I’m a homeowner and had a plumber give me an estimate on adding a recirculation pump to my HW heater. Because my HW heater is the furthest point from the master bath, it can take 2+ minutes to get hot. My current HW heater is 11+ years old – Bradford White 50 gals. I have 2 full baths in the house.

Because of the age of the HW heater, the plumber suggested replacing it with the Rinnai RSP160i tankless heater that has a recirculation pump built in (The estimate was $6900). He gave me two options for the recirculation method. 1. Install a T sensor valve under the sink in the master bath and return from the existing cold-water line. 2. Run a new dedicated return line (This would increase the cost by $1200).

My questions:
  • Do you think replacing the heater is the best course of action because my current 50-gal heater is fine. I hear you can get up to 15 years with a Bradford White.
  • If I do replace the heater is spending the additional $1200 a good idea. I do hear that using the cold-water line as the return has its own issues – the cold water is no longer very cold.
Thanks!
 
I have taken out quite a few Grundfos bridges that customers hate...but havasu says is ok.
The dedicated return line is absolutely the wonderful choice whether on a new tank or tankless.
Get a few other bids for tankless installation. Only choose a tankless with built-in pump. My only brand is Navien, which also has a built in mini-tank so there is never sandwiching of hot/cold/hot, but Nortiz also makes an excellent product with the pump.
One great option if you do go dedicated return line is pushbutton activation for the pump at the far end.
 
My old house had a Navien TWH with a dedicated return line, and it was awesome. Problem was it cost me $10k to implement it. This house is not that old, and wasn't worth a full repipe, so I cheated out with the Grundfos recirculation system.
 
If you don't run out of hot water with the current tank and don't forsee a need for endless hot water, you can get a new 50 gallon tank and add the return line and pump for less than a tankless install.
 

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