RossD wrote:
I want to switch over to a tankless water heater when my current one craps out.
On tankless water heaters:
The City of Red Deer (population, 80,000 and growing rapidly, in 15 years it grew by 30,000 people) has had a BOOMING real estate market. Constant new additions of subdivisions, many which I helped either A) Do all of the plumbing in many houses B) Did inspections and hooked up water services in. In fact, I basically hooked up every water service for three years, at almost 300 per month.
In around 2007, every home builder/plumbing outfit started installing tankless hot water systems. They are great and work fantastic! There is a catch though! They MUST be cleaned once a year at a cost of almost $300 It says right there in the owners manual. Of course, people being regular old people ignored this. Tons of failures recently after about 4 years of service due to internal scale buildup. Now all of the home builders have switched back to tanks, as they don't care and the customer is too stupid to care.
One of my favourite setups for heating homes is a boiler system. Not only does it heat your home when coupled with underfloor heating, but it provides your hot water at the tap. Very, very efficient system, in -30*C winters it cost <$150/month to heat a 1500sqft bungalow (with a 1500sqft basement) and a 24'x24' garage when natural gas prices were through the roof. That's crazy good in Alberta.
Most of my info pertains to new home building design, as my father owns a home building business and specializes in efficient homes. Retrofitting more efficient building methods to older homes is difficult.
Next up is using foam block to make the house out of. Insane r-values, easier in labour costs (my father can do a house himself with one helper, unlike the equivalent crew of men needed to do a basement the traditional way). A sturdier, more solid house (your walls are concrete/Styrofoam), it can't rot like wood, it's basically win-win-win.
A lot of you guys don't have basements, but for those that do or are building a house with one, there is industrial spray foam (for the oilfield) which can be sprayed and set underneath the concrete for better floor insulation, versus laying down crappy inneffective foam sheets that break when you step on them. This spray insulation can also be used in the joists/rafters to great effect! As an added bonus, it works quite well as a vapour barrier.
Windows are huge! Not enough can be said for getting well designed windows, coupled with them being installed and sealed correctly so they don't leak. The nice thing about this is that it is an upgrade that can be done to any house!
Another thing that boggles my mind are people who don't have programmable thermostats. Why not make sure the furnace is completely off from 9am until 4pm, and then ramp back up so when you get home the house is nice and cozy? Same with at night, have them temp drop down when you fall asleep, and ramp back up before you get out of bed. As SVreX said, same with the hot water tank.
Now, onto some more idealistic stuff that I care to talk about
It is now quite easy to go off grid in certain areas. We had initially planned for the parents new acreage to be off grid, with a solar electric setup that would take care of all of the electricity, a solar thermal setup that would provide more than enough hot water/house heating even in the dead of winter, and recovery systems for water. I was shocked and amazed at just how affordable this stuff was if you looked at living there for 5+ years. Some of this stuff can be retrofitted to old houses, and some of it can be used in the city.