View Full Version : Hot Water Recirculation
bross123
12-19-2004, 09:30 AM
Hi,
I need some advice on:
1. Pump size and a good manufacturer/model
2. Return pipe size and type of pipe (will pvc do OK?)
3. Is pipe insulation required
This is for a residential hot water recirculation system which has copper pipes.
I have 3 bathrooms, the farthest is about 70 feet from the Hot Water heater. I would like to run a recirculation system to save water and to get the hot water faster.
Any help/advice would be greatly appreciated.
jadnashua
12-19-2004, 03:48 PM
I just retrofit a redytemp.com unit, really easy and very fast install (about 5-minutes!). Grunfos makes one that has also been recommended. Taco (probably the guts of most of them anyway) now makes one called D'Mand system. If it were me, I'd run either copper or pex as the return line, not pvc. I'm not a pro. I'd definately insulate all pipes, both hot and cold (the cold to prevent condensation).
You cannot use PVC anywhere inside the foundation of a home for water distribution. PVC should never be used with hot water anywhere.
If you are on slab and cannot run a return line, you will need a retrofit unit. I have never installed one of these, so can offer no opinions. If you can run a return line, you can install a recirc pump at the water heater.
I like to keep all the water piping in a home the same if possible--things like galvanized and PB being the exception. I generally run a 1/2" return line. Pipe insulation? Depends on circumstances--crawls with alot of heat ducting stay very warm, insulating pipes helps little on systems on timers rather than thermostats, etc, etc. Grunfos and Taco hold the lion's share of the pump market around here. It seems like I replace alot of pumps, but there are alot of them around here. Vast geothermal resources exist here and virtually every application requires at the very least, a recirc pump.
Check out the Grunsfos web site.
Deb
The Pipewench