Tom the Elder
Well-Known Member
My house has two water heaters - one is inside in the laundry room. That tank serves only the kitchen and laundry room so even the smallest gas-fired tanks are way larger than what is actually needed. Plus, I don't like having the tank inside the house and I could use the extra space gained by getting rid of the tank. I am in the central valley of CA so temperature rise needed isn't huge. My problem is that major manufacturers (AO Smith, Rheem, Rannai, Noritz) don't seem to make small tanks. A couple of questions:
1. What gpm capacity do you think is needed for a water heater serving just a kitchen and laundry room?
2. Many larger units are "condensing" while smaller ones I see (2.5 - 5 gpm) either are not or don't say. Is there an advantage to having a condensing water heater?
3. I presume that, for any given amount of average daily volume, a larger unit (e.g. 6 -9 gpm) will last longer. Is there any other advantage to using a larger heater?
4. I do not recognize the makers of any of the small natural gas water heaters I see (Camplux, Fogatti, etc.). What brands do suggest I consider?
Thanks!
1. What gpm capacity do you think is needed for a water heater serving just a kitchen and laundry room?
2. Many larger units are "condensing" while smaller ones I see (2.5 - 5 gpm) either are not or don't say. Is there an advantage to having a condensing water heater?
3. I presume that, for any given amount of average daily volume, a larger unit (e.g. 6 -9 gpm) will last longer. Is there any other advantage to using a larger heater?
4. I do not recognize the makers of any of the small natural gas water heaters I see (Camplux, Fogatti, etc.). What brands do suggest I consider?
Thanks!