5030tinkerer
Gold Member
I just installed a Bosch AE-125 electric hot water heater. The spec's list maximum flow as 3.5gpm (which seems to contradict another spec of a 4GPM flow at a 45ー rise) and maximum flow at the 80ー temperature rise that I currently need at 2.2GPM. My Delta tub faucet is rated at 5.2GPM at my 70psi pressure and my tub filler in my master is rated at close to 20gpm (when mixing between hot and cold at least - so we can figure 10gpm for this one, I guess).
To achieve higher flows (so my wife doesn't have to start drawing a bath the day before), I am considering installing:
A. A non-insulated water storage tank or possibly insulated water heater tank upstream of the cold water inlet of the tankless to bring the present 40ー inlet water temperature to ambient or possibly up to 86ー (the maximum supported inlet temperature of the Bosch device).
B. Using the AE-125 to pre-heat the water to 107ー and then a 3rd party tankless hot water heater downstream of it (Stiebel Eltron's Tempra 36 - Stiebel Eltron | Tempra™ Series Technical Data) to bring it the rest of the way up (my house has 400A service).
C. Using the AE-125 to pre-heat the water to the maximum temperature possible without any flow restriction (ball valve fully open), but then having a separate hot water tank-based heater downstream of it to serve the demand.
Will any of these methods result in a flow rate equal to or greater than what I need for my tub filler? I am thinking that Option A will get me close, that option B should give me greater than 8GPM (assuming that there truly is no maximum flow specification on the AE-125 at all outside of what my 3/4" line at 70psi can deliver and it's simply a flow rating at a given temperature rise), and that option C will also work, but at the cost of having to keep a tank of hot water hot all the time (which sort of defeats the purpose to some extent). Please confirm.
Of course, there is always Option D, which may actually be the best option but one that I really don't like), of replacing the AE-125 with the Tempra 36 unit and going with option A or C. Under this plan, I'd likely just power the tanked heater off in the summer.
What do you guys think?
I have this question posed to Bosch as well, but Stiebel Eltron has already indicated that from their perspective any of the options would work. Trouble is, of course, that the Bosch warranty is 10 years and the Stiebel Eltron warranty is only three, despite the similar construction.
To achieve higher flows (so my wife doesn't have to start drawing a bath the day before), I am considering installing:
A. A non-insulated water storage tank or possibly insulated water heater tank upstream of the cold water inlet of the tankless to bring the present 40ー inlet water temperature to ambient or possibly up to 86ー (the maximum supported inlet temperature of the Bosch device).
B. Using the AE-125 to pre-heat the water to 107ー and then a 3rd party tankless hot water heater downstream of it (Stiebel Eltron's Tempra 36 - Stiebel Eltron | Tempra™ Series Technical Data) to bring it the rest of the way up (my house has 400A service).
C. Using the AE-125 to pre-heat the water to the maximum temperature possible without any flow restriction (ball valve fully open), but then having a separate hot water tank-based heater downstream of it to serve the demand.
Will any of these methods result in a flow rate equal to or greater than what I need for my tub filler? I am thinking that Option A will get me close, that option B should give me greater than 8GPM (assuming that there truly is no maximum flow specification on the AE-125 at all outside of what my 3/4" line at 70psi can deliver and it's simply a flow rating at a given temperature rise), and that option C will also work, but at the cost of having to keep a tank of hot water hot all the time (which sort of defeats the purpose to some extent). Please confirm.
Of course, there is always Option D, which may actually be the best option but one that I really don't like), of replacing the AE-125 with the Tempra 36 unit and going with option A or C. Under this plan, I'd likely just power the tanked heater off in the summer.
What do you guys think?
I have this question posed to Bosch as well, but Stiebel Eltron has already indicated that from their perspective any of the options would work. Trouble is, of course, that the Bosch warranty is 10 years and the Stiebel Eltron warranty is only three, despite the similar construction.