joester
2 salty dawgs
this is not exactly rocky point talk - but I was hoping maybe someone could give me some tips - do's and don'ts.
we're shopping for solar hot water for our home - we are in an all-electric home.
anyone have experience with solar hot water systems?
I'm seeing a lot of types - passive and active - tankless, heat pump (I don't think that fits our needs). I was told to be sure we get a water filtering system installed if we go tankless -
Tempe has a lot of crap that builds up with the water.
I'd like the system to be as energy-efficient as possible, and I see some of the federal tax credits are going to expire at the end of the year - so I don't have the luxury of a lot of time to learn everything I should know.
I know there's a lot of resourceful and creative folks here, and I really don't want to go the RP route of just a black plastic tank, so that suggestion is out also.
we really want to eliminate the traditional hot water heater we have, getting rid of the potential for another one going bad and leaking is one reason, but saving $$ and being a little greener is the main reason.
Hopefully someone can help - I'll thank you with pomegranite margaritas on the Mirador beach! (there - I've tied the topic to Rocky Point! ) :lol:
thanks
we're shopping for solar hot water for our home - we are in an all-electric home.
anyone have experience with solar hot water systems?
I'm seeing a lot of types - passive and active - tankless, heat pump (I don't think that fits our needs). I was told to be sure we get a water filtering system installed if we go tankless -
Tempe has a lot of crap that builds up with the water.
I'd like the system to be as energy-efficient as possible, and I see some of the federal tax credits are going to expire at the end of the year - so I don't have the luxury of a lot of time to learn everything I should know.
I know there's a lot of resourceful and creative folks here, and I really don't want to go the RP route of just a black plastic tank, so that suggestion is out also.
we really want to eliminate the traditional hot water heater we have, getting rid of the potential for another one going bad and leaking is one reason, but saving $$ and being a little greener is the main reason.
Hopefully someone can help - I'll thank you with pomegranite margaritas on the Mirador beach! (there - I've tied the topic to Rocky Point! ) :lol:
thanks