this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2025
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No one mentioned (probably an assumed thing) to turn the water on full hot to let it warm up, then move it to the preferred mix position. Doesn't waste the cold water which will stay more or less the same temp, it's only flushing out the cold in the hot water line. And because you have it fully on hot, it takes less time.
Or get a tankless water heater to get it almost right away. I've seen debates on which is a better choice when factoring everything in, and I think it's a close tie with no clear winner, each having their caveats.
The water in the pipes is still cold. Tankless heaters are endless, not instant. You still have to wait until the cold water is pushed out of the pipes, same as with a tank. Tankless heaters are still installed in the same central location as a tank and the hot water has to come from that point.
Well, there's those suicide showerheads containing the heating element...
No thanks, I'll use a toaster the old fashioned way.
This is true, but a lot of tankless sells advertise a feature that some have that recirculate the hot water so it's available without the wait.
So some people assume it's a feature all tankless have.
Most houses have a line going from the heater to the tap, not a loop, so the water just sits in the pipe waiting for pressure behind it to push it out of the tap. The cold water in the pipes can't be recirculated. I suppose you could plumb a loop through the whole house and constantly rerun the cooling water through the heater but that kind of defeats the energy savings from a tankless heater. That loop becomes a really long skinny tank that's right next to all of your taps.
In Asia these tankless heaters are in the shower room itself, when they are not turned on there's no water in the pipe (in the part after the heating element).
or install a circulator so cold water in the hot water pipes get back into the tank to get reheated