Over 692,000 strictly plumbing related posts
Plumbing advice, answers, information, help and suggestions are provided here by experienced plumbers who wish to "give back" to others. Since 1996 we have been the best online (strictly) PLUMBING forum. If you have questions and are looking for answers or wish to discuss anything about toilets, sinks, faucets, drainage, water filters, venting, water heating, showers, pumps, and other exclusively PLUMBING related issues then you've come to the right place. Please refrain from asking or discussing legal questions, or pricing, or where to purchase products, or any business issues, or for contractor referrals, or any other questions or issues not specifically related to plumbing. Keep all posts positive and absolutely no advertising. Our site is completely free, without ads or pop-ups and we don't tract you. We absolutely do not sell your personal information. We are made possible by:
Author:
jsjones619 (GA)
Hello:
I am renovating a house in East Point, GA. We are not adding any sq. ft. or new bedrooms or bathrooms. The house has 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms. The house has an existing 50 gallon hot water tank that while old is still functional and working. My plans submitted to the City of East Point did not state I would replace the hot water tank. The inspector disapproved my plumbing inspection saying that the Code requires a minimum 62 gallon tank for a gas based system in a house with 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms. If I have to comply and remove the existing 50 gallon tank and replace with a 75 gallon tank it will cost me $4,200 in round numbers. Is the inspector correct and if not what can I do to convince him to approve me with the existing hot water tank? Thank you. Jeff
|
Post Reply
|
Author:
packy (MA)
50 gallon gas heater is quite large. i think the inspector is wrong.
if you have to, you can turn the water temperature up to 160 and install a tempering valve at the heater to temper the outlet temperature back to 125. you'll increase the capacity by at least 20%. (depends on the cold water temperature)
|
Post Reply
|
Author:
hj (AZ)
Here, 3 BR and 2 bath is almost the minimum, and even larger houses get by with a 50 gallon tank.
|
Post Reply
|
Please note:
- Inappropriate messages or blatant advertising will be deleted. We cannot be held responsible for bad or inadequate advice.
- Plbg.com has no control over external content that may be linked to from messages posted here. Please follow external links with caution.
- Plbg.com is strictly for the exchange of plumbing related advice and NOT to ask about pricing/costs, nor where to find a product (try Google), nor how to operate or promote a business, nor for ethics (law) and the like questions.
- Plbg.com is also not a place to ask radiant heating (try HeatingHelp.com), electrical or even general construction type questions. We are exclusively for plumbing questions.
Search for plumbing parts on our sponsor's site:
Special thanks to our sponsor:
