Pecos
Well-known Member
- Location
- Washington State
Say What??
I really like my outside gas fired tankless water heater. It works like a champ, but the extreme cold temps last night froze the water in the pipes feeding it from under the house. I thought that we would have to either wait for a couple of days for it to thaw, or I could crawl down into the crawl space on my belly with a hair dryer and blow hot air on a fairly long length of pipe that should have been better insulated. It has never gotten cold enough to do this before in the 27 years we have lived here.
Looking at what was going to be a miserable and cold task, I happened to observe that the uninsulated exhaust vent from the clothes dryer ran alongside that water pipe and dumped air warm about 18 inches from the bottom of the hot water heater itself which I suspected might be holding frozen water and unable to work.
I thought it was a weird idea, but worth a try. I turned that dryer on, and 30 minutes later everything apparently melted and the hot water heater came back on line.
It sounds funny, but when the outside temp goes down into the teens, I apparently have to turn on the clothes dryer to warm up the feed water lines in order to get hot water.
I talked to my plumber, who was swamped and would not be able to come until next week. He told me that he had five other units in the area that were doing the same thing. I will give him my solution when I am able to talk to him again.
I really like my outside gas fired tankless water heater. It works like a champ, but the extreme cold temps last night froze the water in the pipes feeding it from under the house. I thought that we would have to either wait for a couple of days for it to thaw, or I could crawl down into the crawl space on my belly with a hair dryer and blow hot air on a fairly long length of pipe that should have been better insulated. It has never gotten cold enough to do this before in the 27 years we have lived here.
Looking at what was going to be a miserable and cold task, I happened to observe that the uninsulated exhaust vent from the clothes dryer ran alongside that water pipe and dumped air warm about 18 inches from the bottom of the hot water heater itself which I suspected might be holding frozen water and unable to work.
I thought it was a weird idea, but worth a try. I turned that dryer on, and 30 minutes later everything apparently melted and the hot water heater came back on line.
It sounds funny, but when the outside temp goes down into the teens, I apparently have to turn on the clothes dryer to warm up the feed water lines in order to get hot water.
I talked to my plumber, who was swamped and would not be able to come until next week. He told me that he had five other units in the area that were doing the same thing. I will give him my solution when I am able to talk to him again.
Last edited: