Why Switch To A Tankless Water Heater. Sediment buildup in conventional tanks vs. the descalable design of a tankless unit. And the real-world fuel savings in Tampa.
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hey everybody my name's Corbin I work for Titan plumet electric and today we're going to cut open a 50 galon electric water heater and take a look at what's [Music] inside all right everybody I've cut open the 50-gon electric water heater now let's take a look at what's inside oh my my God this is horrible look at the amount of sediment inside this heater this builds up over years and years in your tanked heater and it just sits there and swirls around as you use your hot water in your home one of the best ways to prevent sediment is to just get away with the tank heater all in general and do a tankless water heater that doesn't have a tank and cannot get sediment buil up inside of it to this magnitude all right so this is a tankless water heater as you can see it's much much smaller than a tank heater these heat the water on demand as you use hot water so you don't have to have a reserve of 40 to 50 gallons in a tanked heater where that sediment can build up the cold water comes in hot water comes out plain and simple this is an adequate replacement for a tanked water heater all right so if you're interested in a a tankless water heater opposed to a tank one that can build up sediment you should give Titan Plumbing electric a call at 813 93381 or visit our website Titan plumbing and electric.com
Why Switch To A Tankless Water Heater — Tampa Tankless Water Heater Guide
Sediment buildup in conventional tanks vs. the descalable design of a tankless unit. And the real-world fuel savings in Tampa.
A correctly sized tankless system delivers hot water on demand and typically lasts 20+ years — roughly twice the life of a tank — because it has no storage tank to corrode. The trade-off: the upfront cost is higher, and the install hinges on whether your home has the gas line size, venting path, or panel capacity to support the unit. The video above gets into one of those decisions in real terms.
Is your Tampa Bay home tankless-ready?
The most common reason a tankless install gets paused is that the home isn't ready electrically or fuel-wise. Most electric tankless models pull 120–160 amps of dedicated capacity. Gas tankless needs a 3/4-inch gas line in many cases, plus the right venting path. We evaluate every one of those before we quote so you don't get a surprise on install day.
If your panel is a 200-amp service in good condition, we can usually run the dedicated branch circuit and complete the install the same day. If you're on a 100-amp service or a legacy panel (Federal Pacific, Zinsco, Challenger), we'll quote a panel upgrade in the same scope of work — that way you have one inspected, permitted job instead of two trips.
Maintenance Tampa tankless owners need to know about
Tampa hard water scales every tankless heat exchanger. Annual descaling is what keeps the warranty valid and the unit running at spec. We do this with a flushing pump and a food-grade descaler — about 45 minutes of pump time, one visit per year. Skip it for two or three years and you'll see efficiency fall and an error code that requires a heat-exchanger replacement.
- Annual descaling with a food-grade flushing solution
- Inlet filter inspected and cleaned
- Combustion / venting check on gas units
- Smart-app update and warranty status review
Key takeaways
What this video covers in plain English
A tankless conversion is one of the highest-impact upgrades a Tampa Bay homeowner can make on the water-heating budget — but the install hinges on what your home can support today. Here's what we check on every quote.
- Most electric tankless units pull 120–160 amps of dedicated capacity
- Gas tankless typically needs a 3/4-inch gas line and the right venting path
- Annual descaling is required to keep the manufacturer warranty valid
- A correctly sized lower-tier unit beats an oversized premium one
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