My tank went TU 3 weeks ago. My plumber said that the biggest obstacle is (for me) the need for a larger supply line from the utility to the heater. A tank can run on fewer BTU's since it heats water in advance. An instant requires way more "instant" BTU's to heat water to a similar temp on an as needed basis. My >25yo house would need an expensive upgrade to the gas line, assuming he wasn't BS-ing me.
"No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms." - Thomas Jefferson, Virginia Constitution, Draft 1, 1776
3D printer go brrrrrrrrrrrr
I believe this is the default ban response these days.
Low flow - I don't like the sound of that...
I just had a layover in a hotel in Mexico City a few weeks ago. I had almost forgotten how fantastic a shower with no regard for water use was.
Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
I have lost three consecutive tankless electrics (and given up on the concept completely) due to living on rural water, they will not tolerate bubbles or any sort of air void. Those sorts of things and outages that simply happen out here, will certainly happen at some point with a well pump. I think it is a different story with gas versions, but the electric ones will burn up an element in a heartbeat if air gets in the line.
It will not always cover for a jet pump losing its priming, or losing its pressure during a power outage and the air slugs getting in the line. There is a sort of backward slippage as the pressure drops during a power outage that pulls air into the system from the taps. The tank won't keep the pressure in place forever, in fact mine used to let the pressure drop enough for that to happen in about 3-4 hours.
Since I moved to the local rural water system the problem is worse, they dump an air spike in the system every time they have any break anywhere in the 5-6 miles between me and their tank.
I think this is all much less of a problem in the city.