Electric water heater for barn

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DVMSteve

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Greetings, guys and gals; long time no post!

After finishing my house late last year, I've had no questions until now. Many of you were very helpful when I did every scrap of plumbing, start to finish, on my little 5400 sq ft "log cabin". It turned out wonderful, by the way, many thanks!

Now, on to the barn...

No good options for gas here. I'm in eastern NC, and have great county water, coming in at ~55 degrees. I'm just now planning a 4-horse barn, with bathroom, utility sink, and horse wash rack. (My wife is an equine veterinarian.)

I have 400 amp service at the house; the barn subpanel will be about 150' from the house's main panels. Also about 150' away from the utility company's transformer, in case I want to go straight from there. This is sounding like I need to post this on the electric forum, sorry, but to the main point and question:

I was thinking of going tankless for this, as it will be infrequently used, and a low demand system. I've read the posts on electric tankless units, and they certainly don't sound ideal for a residence. What about this type of application?

Thanks for any input,
Steve
 

Jadnashua

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Is this only to wash your hands on occasion, or will there be a shower/tub or something else it needs to supply? You need a significant amount of power to heat water quickly. If it is really rare, maybe a small tank on a timer, or maybe even a switch if you have enough time to let it get warm. A small tank won't take very long.
 

Cass

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You can get point of use tankless electric that will supply enough hot water to wash hands with that will run on 50A.

You can get the units on that famous auction site for around $60-70.00
 

DVMSteve

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Thanks, folks:

This will be to wash hands on occasion, wash equipment in the utility sink on occasion, and to wash horses on occasion; none of these activities on even a daily basis.

Gas is not an option. Small tank on a timer would work, I think. Space is a bit of an issue. Cost isn't a huge factor ($2500 for the four stall waterers and feeders alone:eek: ).
 

DVMSteve

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Just ruminating a bit...(why, when the cow's first stomach is the rumen, is it not spelled 'rumenate'?) Anyway, that's more up my wife's alley. Dogs and cats only have one stomach, as do horses. She does treat cows, sheep, llamas, and goats now and then.

Mike, I have to run electric to the barn anyway for lights and fans. With tankless, obviously a much larger wire and breaker, etc....

I said before that gas is not an option, but maybe it could be... I haven't researched tiny gas tankless units. If there was one that runs off of the small portable gas grill type tanks, then maybe. Can't get a truck over there to refill, you see.

Steve
 

hj

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heater

The point of use electric heaters mentioned, ONLY give enough water to wash your hands, if you do not want a large stream. Their aerators are designed to limit the amount of water and when they are replaced the user gets no hot water unless he throttles the flow using the handle. They would give ZERO hot water to clean any equipment.
 

TMB9862

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If you want to wash horses with hot water you're going to need a gas tank less. I'd just go with an electric tank. Putting it on a timer isn't going to save anything. Basically heating the cool water is going to be as much as maintaining the hot water as far as energy goes, that is unless you're going to turn it off for more than a day or two.
Also is your barn heated? Most I've been in aren't. With a tank you could probably enclose all your plumbing in a small insulated room and the tank or hot water would be enough to keep it above freezing in all but the coldest temperatures.
 
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DVMSteve

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Thanks, folks:

What you say makes sense. Correct, the barn will not be heated, although I'm considering anyway an insulated prep and sitting area that I can insulate and keep warm with a small heater. I'll probably box off a utility closet here and put in a small tank-type water heater.

I appreciate everybody's input, as usual.

Steve
 

Rdtompki

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A propane tankless would certainly work. I've got a 6.9M Noritz mounted on the outside wall of my house which only require a stainless vent cap. A small propane tank (max 10 gal) would heat a lot of hot water and would be fine if you kept a spare tank.

In my barn I've got a 30 gallon electric WH that we turn on the day before we're washing the horses for a show (or first thing in the am). One big advantage to electric tank water heaters is that you can insulte them bottom, top and sides and keep energy loss to an absolute minimum. Much cheaper than a tankless if you're running electricity anyway. Either would work fine in your application, but I do love the fact that the tankless just keeps chugging along producing 120 deg (or whatever temp you want) water.

Rick
 

TMB9862

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DVMSteve said:
Thanks, folks:

What you say makes sense. Correct, the barn will not be heated, although I'm considering anyway an insulated prep and sitting area that I can insulate and keep warm with a small heater. I'll probably box off a utility closet here and put in a small tank-type water heater.

I appreciate everybody's input, as usual.

Steve
That sounds like the best idea to me. Just use a small piece of electric baseboard to heat a small room that contains all your plumbing, then you don't have to worry about pipes freezing unless of course you loose power.






rdtompki said:
A propane tankless would certainly work. I've got a 6.9M Noritz mounted on the outside wall of my house which only require a stainless vent cap. A small propane tank (max 10 gal) would heat a lot of hot water and would be fine if you kept a spare tank.

In my barn I've got a 30 gallon electric WH that we turn on the day before we're washing the horses for a show (or first thing in the am). One big advantage to electric tank water heaters is that you can insulte them bottom, top and sides and keep energy loss to an absolute minimum. Much cheaper than a tankless if you're running electricity anyway. Either would work fine in your application, but I do love the fact that the tankless just keeps chugging along producing 120 deg (or whatever temp you want) water.

Rick
Problem with that is I've never heard of an electric tank less that large. If their was one (which their probably is) it would require a massive amount of electricity and a very large service to the barn.
 

Master Plumber Mark

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30 gallon electric tank type heater

I know of a horse barn that has a 30 gallon
110 volt electric tank type heater in it....


they have it wired into the light switch so when
they turn on the main lights in the barn it starts
to re-heat the water ......
which they need water
to wash horses, or whatever....
they claim that 30 gallons is more than enough


you would have to literally spend a fortune
for a electric tannkless heater plus maintaince....

you can buy a 30 gallon tank type 110 volt for 250 bucks.
and it wil most likely work for 15 years or more.......


why must you try to re-invent the wheel for
10 -30 times the price.....????

keep it simple ....grasshopper........
 
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GrumpyPlumber

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Mark, you're gonna hate me.
Just got a request for an electric tankless, the prices aren't that bad.
SETS is the "creme de la creme" for electric tankless and their highest output whole home unit is under $800, 240 volt, no hidden accessories like the gas ones.
I'm still researching the cost-worthiness of them though, I don't think eletric tank types are very expensive on standby time.
More to be revealed....others feel free to jump in.
 

Bob NH

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You can get tank-type electric heaters from about 2.5 gallons to 120 gallons. The small ones are "point of use" heaters that run on a 120 Volt circuit.

You can connect a standard 240 Volt tank-type heater to 120 Volts and the 4500 Watt heater element will draw only 1125 Watts. That is a about 9.5 Amps and will run on a 15 or 20 Amp circuit with a few lights.

You will get the same temperature but slower reheat after use.

The 240 Volt heater will probably cost less than a "special order" 120 Volt heater.
 

Master Plumber Mark

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GrumpyPlumber said:
Mark, you're gonna hate me.
Just got a request for an electric tankless, the prices aren't that bad.
SETS is the "creme de la creme" for electric tankless and their highest output whole home unit is under $800, 240 volt, no hidden accessories like the gas ones.
I'm still researching the cost-worthiness of them though, I don't think eletric tank types are very expensive on standby time.
More to be revealed....others feel free to jump in.


hate is a very strong word,

pity seems to fit better...


Like Mr. T used to say....

I PITY the fool who thinks he is gonna save one
dime on a tankless on demand electricc water heater....

i
 
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DVMSteve

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master plumber mark said:
why must you try to re-invent the wheel for
10 -30 times the price.....????

keep it simple ....grasshopper........

I think that's good advice here, and you've (all) convinced me. I ran this option by the boss, and she said that that would work fine for her. I think I'll have a separate switch next to the light switch, as Jim suggested.

BTW, I've been following the thread with your experiment with tankless. :) We could talk about high maintenance!

Also, how is it that some of you seem to respond to EVERY thread? And at least one of you (Jim) have helped me on the tile forum too! How much time IS there in a day in your universes? Or do none of you need sleep?

Steve
 

Cass

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We all make billions of dollars a year in our jobs and have all this extra time to try and help people save $$$$.

BTW The photo below is a bridge I have for sale if any one is interested.:D

JLM-California-San%20Francisco-Oakland%20Bay%20Bridge.jpg
 
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Master Plumber Mark

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Also, how is it that some of you seem to respond to EVERY thread? And at least one of you (Jim) have helped me on the tile forum too! How much time IS there in a day in your universes? Or do none of you need sleep?

Steve[/quote]


Well, you got me thinking....
most plumbers just have a natrual knack for bulls//t.....
its part of our sales experience. with customers.......
My wife says I gossip way too much with my cusotomers on the phone

So.... with high speed cable...its like being on steroids...


In my personal case I do my bookwork on Sunday Mornings
and and I find it a nice break to take every so often..
and occasionally its very educational......


I prowl the internet like a "plumbing hound-dog" looking
to solve other peoples problems ----
probably cause no one else will listen to me anymore....

Or Maybe it could be I need to get out more often.....

yesterday, I took a 9 year old to a soccer game in Columbus Ind
then I got to baby sit 5 9 year olds into the evening

So this was my only outlet to the real world...

I am just living the plumbing dream
 
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DVMSteve

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My good friend (who is also my minister, TV/computer repairman, and golfing buddy) is from Columbus, IN. His name is I.C. (Iredell Camuel) Wyatt, and he has family there, and he goes home for a reunion almost every summer.
 
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