Tanada:
Ambient feed tank: brilliant idea! Though, not something to install in the main living area, because "ambient" heat really means "sucks the heat out of the air." You can do that in the basement because some of the basement's heat gets replenished with waste heat from the ground or the 1st floor of the house.
Stryder, re. washers & dryers:
Danby front-loader, about $400 US, and Danby matching 120-volt dryer (1500 watts), about $350 US. Both of these are high quality despite the low prices; they get rave reviews from everyone who has them (see
www.thathomesite.com, click on Laundry). They are relatively compact in square footage, and you can stack the dryer atop the washer. Read the stuff on the website, you'll learn more about these things than you ever wanted to know:-)
Of particular relevance, the washer has an internal heating element so it heats the water it uses, to whatever temp is needed (cold, warm, hot, sanitize). The sanitize cycle is 200 Fahrenheit, which kills everything (thinking of bird flu here). People online have published info on hacking the Danby washer for higher water level if needed, so apparently this machine can be hacked in various clever ways, and that could include a way to set the thermostat to precise temps of your choosing. (I have a different Danby unit, the DTT-420, which only uses about 0.1 KWH for a 6-lb load, and I use water that's just warm enough to not be cold, and use bleach to sanitize when needed.)
Note, unless you get your clothes really dirty, you can reduce detergent dosage, and that will enable you to eliminate one rinse cycle, thereby saving more water & energy. When I use 20 ml. of detergent, I can use one rinse cycle to get all of it out (no suds in the rinse water, and clothes smell like fresh water rather than detergent). When I use 25 ml. of detergent, I need two rinses to get all of it out. Needless to say this makes me acutely aware of measuring detergent accurately.
Danby also makes a countertop-sized dishwasher, which also has various cycles including 200-degree sanitize. It's about the size of a large microwave. Heats the water it uses, which ain't much. Uses less water than washing dishes by hand, even for one person and a load every few days. I would have gotten one by now except it's just a tad too tall to fit under my cabinets. Price is also amazingly low, $150. (I think the way Danby manages these prices is they barely advertise, and they don't have to since they get so much good word-of-mouth.)
Your two main places to save electricity are a) the fridge and b) the clothes dryer.
SunFrost makes incredibly efficient fridges, but they're also way expensive, $2,500 or so. You could probably figure out a way to get a small conventional fridge and modify the heck out of it to be almost as efficient as a SunFrost. This might include building it into a larger cabinet that's super-insulated except in the back around the coils, putting mirror-finish aluminum or other material behind the coils to reflect heat away from the box, and installing a fan to push ambient air over the coils to further reduce the heat that radiates back into the box. In any case, vacuum the dust off the coils regularly; dust buildup causes a surprising amount of energy wastage.
As for the clothes dryer, first of all the Danby washer (and most modern front loaders) has a high speed spin cycle (about 1,200 rpm) which will reduce drying time a decent amount. Use an outdoor clothes line when you can. Use an indoor clothes line during the rainy or winter seasons. And if the stuff isn't totally dry after an overnight on the indoor clothes line, it'll be dryer than when it came out of the washer, so you can put it all in the dryer and it'll dry in half the time. BTW, with dryers, always use the automatic cycle, because the sensor will turn it off as soon as the load is actually dry. Whereas with timed cycles (the usual routine most people do, is "set if for an hour and forget about it until it beeps") will keep running after the clothes are dry, which is obviously wasteful. Do Not use "fabric softener sheets" or "static free" products in the dryer, they just gunk up the automatic sensors so the dryer runs longer than it needs to.
Note, indoor clothes lines will also suck up ambient heat from the air. This is good for summer cooling, but in the winter do your washing at night before bedtime and hang the stuff overnight when the house is going to be cool anyway, so you don't feel the impact of the added cooling.
Re. water heater timers (aha, finally back to the thread topic here!):
I don't keep a normal schedule or even a regular schedule. And I have a gas water heater, which of course has a thermostat, and as far as I can tell does not use any electricty. The plan for a new place would be solar backed up with on-demand electric or some variation of the plan in the last paragraph below.
The question I have about water heater timers is, if you're letting the water go through heat/cool cycles, it seems that you would have extended periods when it's lukewarm, i.e. the right temp to grow Legionnaires' bacteria. Anyone have any data on that?
Seems to me the best bet is a small water tank turned up to very hot. Then use relatively little hot water mixed with a lot of cold. This isn't a waste. Here's why: You use X quantity of energy to heat Y quantity of water to "moderately hot" in a large tank. It takes the same amount of energy to heat a smaller amount of water to a higher temp. When you mix that with cold water, the result is the same as if you'd heated a larger volume of water to a lower temp. (Think of it as "dehydrated hot shower, just add cold water to get warm water"!:-) And here, the "cold" could come in via an ambient tank as per Tanada, so it's already room temperature.