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On Demand Propane Hot Water Heater

MichaelCO
Explorer
Explorer
I have a truck camper, but this question is actually for our non-profit food truck. Our food truck stays in one place at 8,000 feet altitude. We need an on demand propane hot water heater. We do not have access to enough electric to use an electric hot water heater.

Iโ€™ve been trying to research heaters, but the manufactures and distributors wonโ€™t say if they will work at 8,000 feet. They only say โ€œit wonโ€™t as wellโ€, but that doesnโ€™t tell me much. Most of the manufacturers consider "high altitude" to be 2,000 feet. We would need a really, really deep cave to get that low here!

Two that I were looking at were:

โ€ข Furrion 2.4GPM Tankless RV Gas Water https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08DW4GM81/?coliid=I2MINE5Y1F3VMO&colid=2059FVN8ZDRJQ&psc=1&ref_=lv_ov_lig_dp_it

โ€ข GIRARD 2GWHAM Tankless Water Heater https://www.amazon.com/dp/B019BWN8E2/?coliid=I13NSYHQMUDQAI&colid=2059FVN8ZDRJQ&psc=1&ref_=lv_ov_lig_dp_it

Has anyone had practical experience with one of these or any other model that works at minimum 8,000 ft? The food truck will always be at this altitude, not just occasionally.

The hot water will be for washing hands and light dish washing, but the water needs to be good and hot to pass health department inspections.

Please help. I have been getting frustrated in my search.

Thanks,

Michael
14 REPLIES 14

CharlesinGA
Explorer
Explorer
TANK TYPE RV water heaters are known to provide stupid hot water, well over 130 degrees. Get a 10 or 12 gallon Dometic or Suburban water heater, you will be assured of having the hot water you need and they recover rather quickly too.

Continuous or instant water heaters are marginal at best. Everyone in any forum I have seen says they regretted ordering or installing a instant unit and some even switched back to a tank unit. It takes a lot of propane to make a fire big enough to heat water that hot with it flowing thru.

https://parts.unitedrv.com/collections/water-heater-landing-page/products/dometic-10-gallon-gas-elec...

Charles
'03 Ram 2500 CTD, 5.9HO six speed, PacBrake Exh Brake, std cab, long bed, Leer top and 2008 Bigfoot 25B21RB.. previously (both gone) 2008 Thor/Dutchman Freedom Spirit 180 & 2007 Winnebago View 23H Motorhome.

tiptoptune
Explorer
Explorer
From a RVer that lives and camps alot for 20 years in Colorado at 10,000 feet - just replaced a 2000 camper that the 6 gallon propane water heater worked fine for years. Think it was a Suburban brand. Recently got a 2023 camper with a Dometic 6 gallon water heater and it will not stay lit above 7,500 feet. It will if i open the exterior cover over it to give it more air. Called Dometic and they pretty much told me now fix for that high of altitude. I thinking of adding another louver on my door to add more air. Sucks that we let mfgs. get away with building stuff that does not work. I was told they typically see more issues with the furnace, however mine works at 10,000. My 2 cents and sorry no help on your exact question.
2023 Bigfoot 2500 10.4 TC on 2000 3500 dually duramax
Previous - Bigfoot 10.11 TC, lance TC, King Of Road 5th.

ernie1
Explorer
Explorer
Yes that would be wise although you'll find that code requirements are not much different. California tends to have the more rigid standards. Good luck.

MichaelCO
Explorer
Explorer
ernie1, we are in Colorado, not California. I guess I will have to find out more detail on rules in Colorado.

ernie1
Explorer
Explorer
Michael: I'm assuming you are going to be operating your food vehicle in California. If that's the case, your water heater setup will not suffice. Firstly, you do indeed need hot water for hand washing in addition to washing all your cooking and food prep utensil. Also, you only need two sinks for washing utensils and a separate sink for hand washing. What you need is 120 degreeF water for those sinks. If you have a source of potable water that can feed water to your vehicle that would be a good start. From that point, you have to decide what kind of water heater you'll need. To further clarify the sink requirement, only if you have what is called" multiuse utensils" do you need 3 sinks. Multiuse utensils are generally utensils that are offered to the public to use while dining and need to be sanitized afterwards. Think plates, knives, forks, spoons etc. Throwaway plastic and paper utensils are called "single service" and, being throwaway, do not have to be sanitized.

MichaelCO
Explorer
Explorer
ernie1, Thanks for your replies.

Another option I think we will do for now. We have a little ~2 gallon hot water heater that you put on a counter for tea or hot chocolate (not for plumbing, just for counter service kind of thing). We can heat water in that and put in the wash sink (one of 3 sinks for washing). My understanding is you don't need hot water for hand washing, only dish washing and cleaning. We only wash a few utensils or cutting board usually once per day.

We serve pre-cooked gourmet hot dogs and brats. Our non-profit provides paid work experience for teens and young adults with learning disabilities. So we keep it easy for them. There are no customer dishes to wash. We serve on compostable paper and cardboard containers.

ernie1, does that sound reasonable?

wa8yxm
Explorer III
Explorer III
Ok what happens is at high altitude the air is thinner. So you may need to adjust the air/fuel ratio (Air thinger) on the burner.. With the added air flow it will heat a bit slower but it should still work just fine.

Talk to a DEALER of on-demand water heaters in your "Target" area. they will know now to adjust them for altitude. And they will know how well they work and which brands work best... (Or make them the most profit. Beware that).
Home was where I park it. but alas the.
2005 Damon Intruder 377 Alas declared a total loss
after a semi "nicked" it. Still have the radios
Kenwood TS-2000, ICOM ID-5100, ID-51A+2, ID-880 REF030C most times

theoldwizard1
Explorer
Explorer
My $0.02. Get a bigger generator and a residential/commercial all stainless water heater.

Buy once, cry on once.

ernie1
Explorer
Explorer
Michael: Let's try not to make a mountain out of a mole hill here. Follow my advice by doing a little research into what I mentioned regarding water temps, resetting of propane pressure and contact with your local health inspector. Not necessarily the health department.

To be clear, and I base this on 30+ years of experience, if ever a food poisoning complaint about your vehicle/operation occurs and you have an inspected, approved and permitted unit it will generate an inspection and not an automatic closure.

GDETrailer: Please do not speak about things you are NOT educated nor trained to do. You are only inflaming this matter and are of no help for someone trying to solve a problem. Enough already man!

Michael if you have further questions fire. away. I'll give you answers that are true based on my background and qualifications and not mere speculation.

Gdetrailer
Explorer III
Explorer III
MichaelCO wrote:
I can try contacting a food truck supplier, but I would think that RV people out in the rockies would camp at much higher altitudes than towns with food trucks. Worth a shot though.

Still would like to hear from other RVers.

Michael


Just because a RVr might camp at 8000 ft and is able to keep their water heater working, doesn't exactly mean you will be able to do so also.

There are some RV water heaters which are not "adjustable", the fuel to air mixture is fixed, no shutters and no different orifices.

Not trying to make this difficult or expensive, but the reality is if there is ever a question about your setup, it is on your shoulders as the builder for the proper operation of said equipment. Granted only talking hot water in this case but all it takes is one person to get sick and the entire operation will get shut down.

On demand water heaters are not exactly known for stability in water temps and the water temps do change considerably with the input temp and water flow. The faster the flow and the colder the input water the lower the output temp will be. They also have a specific water flow requirement before the burner will turn on, not enough flow and you get cold water.

For these reasons, it is imperative you get in contact with your local food safety inspectors, they most likely will be able to get you very specific detailed info on what they require and why any old RV water heater may not be a good choice.

ernie1
Explorer
Explorer
Michael: You stated. that your group is a non profit and I'm wondering who you'll be selling food to? If it's to only a private group like church members of a local social club of some sort you may not even need a health permit.

ernie1
Explorer
Explorer
Michael: I'm a retired Environmental Health Specialist better known as a health inspector and worked for 30 years as a health inspector and one of my duties was to inspect and permit food trucks.

Firstly, I want to answer your questions and doubts about how to equip this vehicle. I, myself have an rv with a Truma water heater and just came back from a trip to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon which is at an elevation of 8,000+' above sea level and the unit worked just fine. What you need is a minimum of 120 deg F of hot water for hand and utensil washing. As far as the 8,000' elevation goes, I would, once you are set up on location, call a local mobile technician to have him reset the propane regulator to a pressure that's appropriate. This is especially true since you indicated you won't be moving the truck once you're setup.

Secondly, if you have doubts or questions about health code compliance, try reaching out to the inspector assigned to the area you'll be operating at. Inspectors appreciate that you're trying to meet code requirements and that you're cooperating.

MichaelCO
Explorer
Explorer
I can try contacting a food truck supplier, but I would think that RV people out in the rockies would camp at much higher altitudes than towns with food trucks. Worth a shot though.

Still would like to hear from other RVers.

Michael

Gdetrailer
Explorer III
Explorer III
RV junk.

Not worthy of commercial food truck service.

You need to connect with place that constructs commercial food trucks and find out what they use, most likely is going to cost substantially more than RV water heaters and the commercial grade manufacturers will pass all health codes for food service.

High altitude service can be problematic, RV water heaters often have issues with high altitudes. Commercial units should be configurable for that type of service.

HERE is one food truck builder you could try contacting to find out what they use.

You also should reach out to your local food safety inspector folks as they are the ones that will need to build to and satisfy.

Food service is not a place to skimp or cut corners.