Hi there,
Does anybody use the 'low flow' Hass Intellifaucet D250 with a tankless electric water heater?
I've been told by a sales person that the Stiebel Eltron DHC-E8 tankless electric water heater will activate with a minimum water flow of 1100ml per minute and is adjustable from 86F to 125F, depending on inlet temperature. The Intellifaucet activates at a minimum water flow of 950ml per minute. It seems to me these two units would work together for darkroom use because the Intellifaucet's minimum volume for activation is well below the heaters.
I measured out 1200ml of 86F water (100 ml above the heaters activation volume to be safe) and added cold water from our local water system to bring it to 68F (as if I was washing prints), and it took 600ml. The way I figure it, this would give me a minimum print washing volume of 1800ml per minute.
Another factor which I don't know is applicable or not, is that the Intellifaucet has a minimum water pressure activation point of 10 psi.
I'm researching options for turning our garage into a darkroom. I'm pretty much sold on the Intellifaucet's "dial in the temperature you want and walk away" reliability. I've been advised in another thread to consider a 30 gallon hot water tank, and that's still on the table I guess, if I have to, but I'd rather go tankless if at all possible. I'll be using a 16x20 print washer that takes 22 gallons of water just to fill, and I hate running out of hot water...
Murray
Does anybody use the 'low flow' Hass Intellifaucet D250 with a tankless electric water heater?
I've been told by a sales person that the Stiebel Eltron DHC-E8 tankless electric water heater will activate with a minimum water flow of 1100ml per minute and is adjustable from 86F to 125F, depending on inlet temperature. The Intellifaucet activates at a minimum water flow of 950ml per minute. It seems to me these two units would work together for darkroom use because the Intellifaucet's minimum volume for activation is well below the heaters.
I measured out 1200ml of 86F water (100 ml above the heaters activation volume to be safe) and added cold water from our local water system to bring it to 68F (as if I was washing prints), and it took 600ml. The way I figure it, this would give me a minimum print washing volume of 1800ml per minute.
Another factor which I don't know is applicable or not, is that the Intellifaucet has a minimum water pressure activation point of 10 psi.
I'm researching options for turning our garage into a darkroom. I'm pretty much sold on the Intellifaucet's "dial in the temperature you want and walk away" reliability. I've been advised in another thread to consider a 30 gallon hot water tank, and that's still on the table I guess, if I have to, but I'd rather go tankless if at all possible. I'll be using a 16x20 print washer that takes 22 gallons of water just to fill, and I hate running out of hot water...
Murray
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