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Sly, no doubt they had them in Cambodia for practical reasons that it was easier than a central heater, but I actually looked into one of these years ago for the whole house (I think I was looking at gas models?) as I was intrigued at the idea of just heating water when I actually used it, but:Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.
They are more expensive ...initial cost Thiers no energy loss ...you will need multple for a mcmansionSly, no doubt they had them in Cambodia for practical reasons that it was easier than a central heater, but I actually looked into one of these years ago for the whole house (I think I was looking at gas models?) as I was intrigued at the idea of just heating water when I actually used it, but:Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.
- The unit was considerably more expensive than a standard central heater.
- It is actually more expensive to operate for the amount of water you heat because of the need for extremely high instant on current or BTU demand to heat the water so hot so quickly in the short time it goes through the heat exchanger.
Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.
Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.
Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.
Sly, no doubt they had them in Cambodia for practical reasons that it was easier than a central heater, but I actually looked into one of these years ago for the whole house (I think I was looking at gas models?) as I was intrigued at the idea of just heating water when I actually used it, but:Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.
- The unit was considerably more expensive than a standard central heater.
- It is actually more expensive to operate for the amount of water you heat because of the need for extremely high instant on current or BTU demand to heat the water so hot so quickly in the short time it goes through the heat exchanger.
I don't much see the point. I put a nice water heater in around 1995 for under $300 and it is still working great.Sly, no doubt they had them in Cambodia for practical reasons that it was easier than a central heater, but I actually looked into one of these years ago for the whole house (I think I was looking at gas models?) as I was intrigued at the idea of just heating water when I actually used it, but:Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.
- The unit was considerably more expensive than a standard central heater.
- It is actually more expensive to operate for the amount of water you heat because of the need for extremely high instant on current or BTU demand to heat the water so hot so quickly in the short time it goes through the heat exchanger.
One of the biggest problems we ran into were the gas lines. Most American homes just dont have the capacity to run one correctly and you get a bunch of error codes and you have to reset it.Sometimes replacing your meter is the only option. We got lucky and only had to install larger lines.
You also cant have the control panel in your attic because the cold messes with them.
Once you get all the bugs worked out they're great but be prepared to ass up some cash.
I don't much see the point. I put a nice water heater in around 1995 for under $300 and it is still working great.Sly, no doubt they had them in Cambodia for practical reasons that it was easier than a central heater, but I actually looked into one of these years ago for the whole house (I think I was looking at gas models?) as I was intrigued at the idea of just heating water when I actually used it, but:Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.
- The unit was considerably more expensive than a standard central heater.
- It is actually more expensive to operate for the amount of water you heat because of the need for extremely high instant on current or BTU demand to heat the water so hot so quickly in the short time it goes through the heat exchanger.
One of the biggest problems we ran into were the gas lines. Most American homes just dont have the capacity to run one correctly and you get a bunch of error codes and you have to reset it.Sometimes replacing your meter is the only option. We got lucky and only had to install larger lines.
You also cant have the control panel in your attic because the cold messes with them.
Once you get all the bugs worked out they're great but be prepared to ass up some cash.
Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.
Why aren't they selling them in Walmart? When I was in Cambodia all the hotels had one. If they can afford them so can we. They save money on electricity and they're hot. Instantly hot.