Cool thanks man. On a funny note i didnt pay attention to the knobs and fired it up as is and it cranked up to 170 f instantly. About blew my faucets off. Got it dialed in tho
6 “ clearance from single wall appliance exhaust vent to combustibles and high temp sealant around flange. Grade on the exhaust pipe is in order for the condensation of the exhaust products to drain away from the appliance
Wrong, all tankless MUST use a pressure only relief valve. There is no way that the temperature part of a standard T&P valve could accurately read the true temperature of a tankless units heat exchanger. (Which is a coil of pipe, NOT a tnak type vessel.) Now all TANK type heaters MUST have the T&P valve because a closed tank will explode under excessive pressure, but a temp sensing valve will open when the temp is too high, which will happen well before the pressure builds up.
@petertomasovszky136 so i bought a Camplux indoor water heater directly from the manufacturer. It's funny because they sent me 2 of them?? Haha. But the quality of the newer ones from Camplux is way better than older models. The inside parts are made out of copper. I love it. Anyways. Thanks for the video man.
@@jessiedaniels6500I had to take mine apart since the heat exchanger froze the burst (my fault, didn’t drain the system for winter). I was also blown away by the build quality! More people should know about these cheap water heaters. Easy to install too
Hi Peter, thank you for sharing.
You are so welcome!
Great video. I bought one but keeping getting E1 code when i run it warm (cold and hot valves)
E1 might be low propane
Cool thanks for the vid. Im going to attempt one in my live in camper
Np. Good luck, and let me know how it goes
Went great. First warm shower in weeks. Day 3 of instal and no probs
@@guanoApe Awesome. It should give you very little problem. Just make sure you don't let it freeze in the winter. I did, and I had to replace the coil
Cool thanks man. On a funny note i didnt pay attention to the knobs and fired it up as is and it cranked up to 170 f instantly. About blew my faucets off. Got it dialed in tho
@@guanoApe this is how I learn as well😀
6 “ clearance from single wall appliance exhaust vent to combustibles and high temp sealant around flange. Grade on the exhaust pipe is in order for the condensation of the exhaust products to drain away from the appliance
Thanks for taking the time to write this up for me!
I bought a thimble to go through the wall. I’ll pack it with Rock wool insulation as well as rock wool in the wall surrounding the thimble.
You should have a temperature and pressure relief Saftey valve on any domestic hot water heating appliance
Wrong, all tankless MUST use a pressure only relief valve. There is no way that the temperature part of a standard T&P valve could accurately read the true temperature of a tankless units heat exchanger. (Which is a coil of pipe, NOT a tnak type vessel.)
Now all TANK type heaters MUST have the T&P valve because a closed tank will explode under excessive pressure, but a temp sensing valve will open when the temp is too high, which will happen well before the pressure builds up.
Thank you for this video
Thank you for taking the time to write! Let me know if you have any questions
@petertomasovszky136 so i bought a Camplux indoor water heater directly from the manufacturer. It's funny because they sent me 2 of them?? Haha. But the quality of the newer ones from Camplux is way better than older models. The inside parts are made out of copper. I love it. Anyways. Thanks for the video man.
@@jessiedaniels6500I had to take mine apart since the heat exchanger froze the burst (my fault, didn’t drain the system for winter). I was also blown away by the build quality! More people should know about these cheap water heaters. Easy to install too
I hope this helps
keep your detector low not high.
Carbon monoxide is lighter than air, meaning it rises: www.epa.gov/indoor-air-quality-iaq/where-should-i-place-carbon-monoxide-detector