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Well, the ER refit/rehab is under way, with stringer replacement soon
to come. However, the leaking POS Raritan water heater is soon to find its way to the junkyard. It looks similar to another Raritan water heater I see in the yard, which is to say rust stained and streaked from wherever it is that the water came/comes out. In my case, it's a pinhole, somewhere, as it manifests itself in not only water around the base, but steam out the top. The six (inlet and outlet for feed and heat exchange, relief valve and heater element) designed holes in the unit are dry... In trying to assess the durability of (electric/heat exchange - see bottom for discussion of "instant") water heaters, I see several iterations of mode. First is the Raritan, which is a glass-lined galvanized unit. Just like at home, but you aren't usually going to have salt air around your home unit, nor bouncing around as the earthquakes hit. I don't think I want to go that route again, whether or not it's the most expensive around. Second is other (also) expensive units, which have, usually, stainless steel innards, and, occasionally, stainless steel outards. As there's no grade of stainless I've seen which won't rust, I don't know that I have any enthusiasm for that (SS shell) part, but the SS interior is interesting on the basis of its inability to make AlCl crystals to clog up my water system, and the presumption of a reasonably robust construction as compared to Aluminum; nearly all the non-heater (water, fuel, holding) tank replacement discussions I see wind up going to stainless (or to rotomolded, but that's not practical for water heaters) if they don't want to suffer a leak in the future. That suggests SS is a good way to go. However, the third iteration is WH tanks with aluminum innards. Those are universally inexpensive by comparison to the others (but outrageous by comparison to HD units, not surprisingly). At least one manufacturer proclaims that theirs are more robust (and/or the reason to buy theirs) than SS units, as SS units have a predilection to leak at (they say) at less-than-sufficient welds (whereas theirs are [stated to be] superior [in part, due to the metal?] welds). Assuming those assertions to be true, I still have an aversion to aluminum, as AlCl crystals, and other corrosion issues, are the bane of aluminum tanks everywhere. However, not- leaking trumps AlCl issues, because it's relatively trivial to insert a carbon filter before the tank to filter only the supply to the hot water (our water and fuel tanks are fiberglass) of chlorine, should any remain after watering wherever it is we take on supplies and it makes its way to the water heater. So, I'm looking for input on (long-term; I'd prefer not to have to do this again very soon) experience with both SS and Aluminum interiors on hot water heaters. I've had a recommendation for Super-Stor SS interior units, but the only vendor I've found for them is Defender (which in itself is good, but they're as far away from me as possible and still be in the continental US, which means long and expensive shipping). I've also had a recommendation for the wall-mounted units which are essentially on-demand water heaters. They come in propane and electrical models. I have a problem with both types, and individual problems with each. The problem with both types is that there's no storage. That means that water coming in has to be heated before it goes out; we shower with some fairly extensive time between hot water uses (wet, soap, shave, anything else, then rinse), which means it has to start over. One could put a unit at each location to solve that, of course, but in our case, that's three, and mucho dinero. The bigger problem(s) is that the draw electrically is more than our inverter is capable of handling (we're replacing the one which was lost to salt water intrusion in our wreck; it's 1500W), so we can't use one of those (the ones I've seen start at ~20A/120VAC and go up from there). The propane ones make me nervous, in addition to the complexities of usage. Short of placing it in the propane locker (I don't know how big they are, but I suppose one might fit by displacing one of the two 10# bottles in ours), I have a real problem in having "always live" propane in the boat living space. There's also a supply issue (we'd have to run a new line to wherever it was), so those are non-starters. OTOH, if there are users of these units reading, I'd enjoy hearing about how you overcame those objections. So, please, reports of (positive or negative - a reason to avoid is as valuable as a recommendation) experience? And for those who've bought one, is there another vendor besides Defender for Super-Stor? Thanks, as always. L8R Skip Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery ! Follow us at http://groups.google.com/group/flyingpiglog and/or http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheFlyingPigLog There is no such thing as a problem without a gift for you in its hands. You seek problems because you need their gifts. |
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