@
Andy65
All gas and fossil fuel boilers fail on cost of running at nil net carbon, with nobody even close to a scaleable carbon capture and storage solution to gobble up more than all pollution from oil and gas. I do not seek minimum cost because I don't disregard the pollution.
The old gas combi boiler is downstairs in the kitchen. It is several minutes x 15kW of gas to start getting hot water upstairs, so I do that for a bath or might use a kettle to wash hands. My normally-off gas boiler using 120 Watts for a few minutes for pump and blower doesn't impair my costs and in daytime can often do that inside the free solar power surplus.
The new water heater, being less than £90 new, is just a component for some smart appliance design-test-improve pokes. It is a well insulated 5 litre capacity thing containing a 2.2kW water heater element, a spout, and a mechanical thermostat which I'll still want as a safety limit. In some respects I could have saved the money and tested with a kettle or with a smaller water heater, but that would have lacked capacity and insulation by comparison to what I''l need to catch the available sporadic little bits and pieces of cut price electricity, always seeking more utility within genuine nil CO_2.
I'm not aiming to beat "mines cheaper than yours" metrics this time, which the £5 kettle last year was the winner of, and the £15 half-size kettle was getting best matching to available free solar in summer enough to have fully paid for itself and then continues to make gainful savings. I am aiming towards "if new-build houses got these instead of gas combi, that would best do the job for them, at nil net CO_2?". I looked at "solar diverter" immersion heater hot water tanks, and thought that those look a lot bigger than the quantity which I'd use or the solar power surplus which I'll have off my small roof this winter. I've already spent an extra £40 on a suitable 220/110 Volt transformer because the roof more frequently has 600 Watts to spare than 2000+; this is a test&dev project not a final product, for which a family sized hot water tank and much bigger rooftop solar should probably be better. Minimum cost could build a water heater like mine with a smaller 240 Volt heating element.