We have just installed a Rinnai RU 199IN tankless water heater. This is replacing an Eternal unit we had for several years. We are using exactly the same plumbing but are experiencing a problem with the Rinnai that we never had with the Eternal. Whenever we turn on any cold tap, the Rinnai unit starts to run. The "In Use" light does not turn on but we can hear a pump (or similar) running. The Rinnai turns off again after about 10-15 seconds, regardless of whether we keep the cold water running or not.
We have isolated the problem to the fact that we have 2 "on-demand" recirc pump units in the house. These are units where you push a button when you want hot water and a pump runs that pumps the water in the hot line back into the cold line until the unit senses that the water is warm. One is a Taco Genie 0011-CF; the other is a Chili Pepper CP9000. If I close the isolation valves to *both* of these units, the problem goes away, but if I leave either one connected, the problem happens.
Our static water pressure is around 65 PSI. It drops only very slightly when a cold tap is turned on (or a toilet is flushed). I should add that if I slowly open a cold tap and gradually increase the flow, the Rinnai unit does not turn on. So it definitely seems to be tied to a transient flow of hot water caused by a cold tap turning on.
So far we've tried the following, all to no avail:
- add a check valve on the cold water inlet to the the Rinnai
- add an expansion tank (pumped to 55 PSI) after the check valve on the cold water inlet to the the Rinnai
- add a check valve to the hot water outlet of the Rinnai
- Change the Rinnai's "Low Activation Mode" setting from On to Off.
The remaining suggestions I've been given are:
- remove the check valve on the cold inlet and set the expansion tank to 65 PSI. (I think the theory here is that the expansion tank might offset the transient drop in water pressure and thus stop the hot water flow).
- replace the check valves on both of the recirc pump units. (It's hard for me to believe that both units would be defective in the same way.)
I'm getting reluctant to keep trying things as this experimenting is getting expensive and frustrating :-( Would really appreciate any suggestions from the experts as to what's happening and what, if anything, I can do to fix it.
We have isolated the problem to the fact that we have 2 "on-demand" recirc pump units in the house. These are units where you push a button when you want hot water and a pump runs that pumps the water in the hot line back into the cold line until the unit senses that the water is warm. One is a Taco Genie 0011-CF; the other is a Chili Pepper CP9000. If I close the isolation valves to *both* of these units, the problem goes away, but if I leave either one connected, the problem happens.
Our static water pressure is around 65 PSI. It drops only very slightly when a cold tap is turned on (or a toilet is flushed). I should add that if I slowly open a cold tap and gradually increase the flow, the Rinnai unit does not turn on. So it definitely seems to be tied to a transient flow of hot water caused by a cold tap turning on.
So far we've tried the following, all to no avail:
- add a check valve on the cold water inlet to the the Rinnai
- add an expansion tank (pumped to 55 PSI) after the check valve on the cold water inlet to the the Rinnai
- add a check valve to the hot water outlet of the Rinnai
- Change the Rinnai's "Low Activation Mode" setting from On to Off.
The remaining suggestions I've been given are:
- remove the check valve on the cold inlet and set the expansion tank to 65 PSI. (I think the theory here is that the expansion tank might offset the transient drop in water pressure and thus stop the hot water flow).
- replace the check valves on both of the recirc pump units. (It's hard for me to believe that both units would be defective in the same way.)
I'm getting reluctant to keep trying things as this experimenting is getting expensive and frustrating :-( Would really appreciate any suggestions from the experts as to what's happening and what, if anything, I can do to fix it.