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Used to be Singpilot...
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Sioux Falls, SD is what the reg says on the bus.
Posts: 1,867
Another water heater question.

Recently left the house on a 10 day mission.

Turned the water heater control to 'pilot'.

Came back 10 days later to water as hot as ever. Restored control to normal spot. Burner immediately came on, ran for 10 minutes, shut off, as normal. Could the pilot (propane) alone have kept the water hot? I normally keep the temp control to pretty minumum, as shower hot is as hot as it needs to be.

Have entered phase two of the question/research. Returned switch to 'pilot' today, will use hot water as usual, and see if cold ever emerges.

Well water is from Lassen snowmelt, enters house at 42F this time of year, ambient outside is 100F days, 70F nights. 50 gallon heater is in manufactured R22 insulated house interior back porch, with a blanket.


Last edited by fingpilot; 07-15-2009 at 09:13 PM..
Old 07-14-2009, 01:48 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fingpilot View Post
... Could the pilot (propane) alone have kept the water hot? ...
Yes. Esp w/o water flow.
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Old 07-14-2009, 01:54 PM
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Those things are heavily insulated, they could stay warm that long with out the pilot light with no water flow.
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Old 07-14-2009, 02:01 PM
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Mine does the same thing. I do however show about a 25% decrease in the gas bill when I am out of town for a week. Something is going on.
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Old 07-15-2009, 05:28 AM
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Used to be Singpilot...
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Sioux Falls, SD is what the reg says on the bus.
Posts: 1,867
Control in 'pilot' position for two days now. Showers in morning are plenty warm. Tomorrow, after showers, will run dishwasher and see how that does, then laundry. I suspect the showers are OK, but the other 'high stress' stuff will exhaust the hot water.

Old 07-15-2009, 09:12 PM
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