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wingsparyesterday at 4:23 PM2 repliesview on HN

It’s a thing in the US too, but not common. I always understood them to be expensive to use, as you always have a pump running and hot water cooling down and needing reheating.

Hot water recirculating pump. https://www.familyhandyman.com/article/hot-water-recirculati...


Replies

jasonpeacockyesterday at 5:16 PM

My house originally had a recirculating pump for the hot water but it burned out. Somehow though, it still (mostly) worked and had instant _warm_ water.

I think it was through natural convection/circulation - the hot water expanded in the tank and pushed it through the recirculating loop?

So maybe there's a good-enough solution that doesn't require a pump, just a return loop.

Now I have an on-demand water heater with a built-in recirculating pump, so it's instantly hot :)

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anovikovyesterday at 5:03 PM

Yes, in the Soviet Union, hot water was a byproduct of production of electricity - using combined heat and power, it was a waste heat. And it used lots of electricity to make weapons to advance dictatorship of proletariat, so there was plenty of free heat, too.