...It occurs to me that one friend, who Tam was joshing in her comments, may feel hurt by my recent post. I didn't intend that, and to the extent nitwitty "Greens" have pushed tankless water heaters on the easily-led, he's got a point. It's just that I can't conceive choosing a water heater based on guilt or even on "saving the planet."* Oh, I'd pass up coal (too dirty!), having been the landlady of a duplex formerly heated with coal: fifty or more years on, you'd still come down from the attic coated in the stuff, looking just like a coal miner (and the furnaces, gas-converted, were in the basement; there was not even so much as a duct in the above-the-second floor attic!). Wouldn't care for fuel oil, either, unless it was the only option: there's always a whiff of it about.
But tankless is a convenience, at least when it works, a convenience that sucks down gas or electricity at an astounding rate when it runs. You'd think it would make Mother Gaia weep, especially assuming she understands what having to build distribution systems to meet peak demand implies! Conversely, with a conventional unit, half the year it's helping heat my basement (and the other half, it's helping keep the damp at bay). So either way, I win, just different prizes.
And either way, it's a hearty "bug off!" to the freeze-in-the-dark set.
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* It's odd, they go on and on about "saving the earth," but let 'em catch you even once with 367,852 Mason jars fulla assorted and various kinds of farm and back yard dirt stacked up the basement and it doesn't matter how neatly those jars were stacked or how careful you were to label them for time, zodiacal sign and sky color when collected, they're all "72 hours for observation" and "evaluation of mental stability." --Anyway, that's what I heard.
My family raised seed potatos in MT for many years (we still have the acreage) and many of my numerous cousins would come in the summer to help. The last year we harvested, my cousin Wayne and his young family happened to visit. On their departure, I bestowed on them a Folgers coffee crystal jar of pure, 100% Montana spud mud, the last vintage from that era. It still sits proudly on their mantle in Las Vegas; an oddity, to be sure, but rife with memories.
ReplyDeleteMy family raised seed potatos in MT for many years (we still have the acreage) and many of my numerous cousins would come in the summer to help. The last year we harvested, my cousin Wayne and his young family happened to visit. On their departure, I bestowed on them a Folgers coffee crystal jar of pure, 100% Montana spud mud, the last vintage from that era. It still sits proudly on their mantle in Las Vegas; an oddity, to be sure, but rife with memories.
ReplyDeleteOnly 367,852? You're, I mean they're just a hobbyist then?
ReplyDeleteDon't even ask about the looks you get when they find a humpback in your bath. They get quite 'irate' even - or so a 'friend' told me I mean!
It's like the Eskimo soap opera, "Humback Mountian:" 97 minutes, and all they do is chew the fat and blubber!
ReplyDelete;)
One other advantage of a hot water heater with a permanently-on pilot light...the constant draft of exhaust up the chimney helps keep the chimney dry, and deters critters from perching on and crawling down it.
ReplyDeleteWell, I have had a Tankless Heater for about 3 years now. Pricey, but 120 degree Water (mine is set to 11) 24/7? Priceless!
ReplyDeleteAnd since I needed one because we were looking at replacing Heater #2 with Heater#3 after only 8 years(#1 went out the door when we bought the house), we went for it.
And our Natural Gas Bill went DOWN because we weren't keep a 40 gal. tank Luke Warm 24/7.
YMMV, of course.
Greatest.
ReplyDeleteFootnote.
Evar.