Hi Peter, Darryl, Dean, et al,

You have good info in searching for a tankless machine that is a temperature 
modulated machine. In the old days of only natural draft tankless you could 
choose between flow modulated and temperature modulated (and perhaps other 
mechanisms of which I am not aware). Today, while there are still natural draft 
tankless water heaters readily available which exhibit, in the words of one of 
the manufacturers, "mission critical reliability", the larger capacity units 
are primarily power vented tankless water heaters. All of the "big five" in the 
tankless arena that market to North America (Bosch, Noritz, Rinnai, Paloma, and 
Takagi) offer power vented machines. IMHO, the only commonality between natural 
draft tankless and power vented tankless are they both use gas as a fuel 
source. Full stop. Venting and the requirement for electric power are the 
biggest differences.

To the best of my knowledge, all current production power vented machines 
utilize an inlet water temperature sensor (as well as an outlet water 
temperature sensor) and would therefore be suitable for use with preheated 
water. The rub comes when your preheat water only needs a bit more heat. Since 
none of the tankless available today can modulate to zero there is a 
(sometimes) noticeable step when the "backup" tankless heater adds it's minimum 
contribution. Since both the Vaughn Sepco and Rheem/Ruud heat exchange tanks 
both offer electric elements as standard (no additional cost) as do 
off-the-shelf electric tank water heaters, the use of the electric elements as 
backup did not cost you any more in initial expense. Unfortunately, when the 
preheat isn't sufficient you are using electric to heat the entire (usually 
large) tank and you are blessed with standby losses that are costing you out of 
pocket money. The tankless and preheat are really a perfect match in so far as 
heating only when (and as much as) necessary albeit the step or perhaps better 
described as the stumble when/if only a bit of additional heat is necessary and 
the obvious detractor - the cost of the tankless when the electric tank 
elements are already in place. 

A high turn down ratio is commendable but the absolute low end of burner 
performance is perhaps one way to choose preheat backup tankless. The use of 
code compatible thermostatic mixing valve(s) (e.g. Honeywell AM-1 series) is 
one more practical tool. The more stuff that goes into the system, the more 
possibility there is for a failure. 

One aspect of the tankless that all too often is overlooked is the opportunity 
to put the machine close to the load. If you have widely separated loads then 
one solution is to put in two smaller machines-one close to each load. Thereby 
eliminating the wait or need for any recirc system. The practice of putting the 
new power vented tankless where the old tank was or on the inside of an outside 
wall (in freezing climates) simply to minimize the venting issues demonstrates 
to me a lack of good design/planning/understanding.

Apologies for the tardy reply.

Caveat emptor, YMMV, Sincerely,

Bill Loesch
Solar 1 - Saint Louis Solar

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Peter Parrish 
  To: 'RE-wrenches' 
  Sent: Sunday, December 07, 2008 5:02 PM
  Subject: [RE-wrenches] SDHW and Tankless Heaters


  We do a few SDHW systems and only for customers that purchase a PV system 
from us and want SDHW as well. We want to recommend a tankless heater where it 
makes sense (very old gas hot water heater or we need the space to swap out the 
existing gas water heater for the solar storage tank, new construction, etc.).



  I went to a seminar on the subject a few years ago and one of the key issues 
was choosing a tankless heater that "modulates on input water temperature". The 
only one I was aware of at the time was a small Bosch system with ½ Cu lines. 
Are there big fellows that "modulates on input water temperature" and could 
someone recommend one?  



  - Peter

  Peter T. Parrish, President
  California Solar Engineering, Inc.
  820 Cynthia Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90065
  Ph 323-258-8883, Mobile 323-839-6108, Fax 323-258-8885
  CA Lic. 854779, NABCEP Cert. 031806-26
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 



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