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As far as I know he is still alive.
"Not sure it wouldn't be easier just to turn on the hot water to re-heat the bath"
The FIRST PARAGRAPH tells you why he does not do this.
I have EXACTLY the same problem AND I have a spare (and gutted) coffemaker I was using as a distillery. I will be lounging in warm water all night!
The ball valve is also the part that gets kludged up with lime and you have to clean it with vinegar or it gets too hot and you burn out that little heat fuse. I like the bike tire (cheap and easy) but it might be better with silicone tubing to withstand the heat hate to have the tube leak in the middle of a nice bath.
Used hot water heaters really are not that expensive. As long as the tank is solid, the rest of the tank is pretty simple.
Using something like that, I think you could come up with a slightly more elegant and less dangerous kludge.
It explains how the coffee maker works without a pump. That means that if you take the heater assembly, hack both hoses into the tub, and keep the whole thing lower than the water level in the tub, it should work without a pump.
Use really long hoses, and you won't have the safety hazards that this project entails.
Let us know if you work on it more!
1) Submerge as much of the tube as you can in the water.
2) Cap the open end of the tube (a thumb comes in handy here).
3) Pull the tube out so that the water in the tube goes up over the edge and comes down to a level lower than the surface of the water.
4) Remove thumb.
As long as the water in the tube is lower than the surface, the pressure differential will push water through the tube. Get the water going, then raise the open end of the tube and put it back in the tub. As long as it's primed to the heater element, it'll draw cold(er) water from the tub.
Also, you should look into a pellet stove. They are just about the greenest heating solution out there, not TOO terribly expensive, and easier than a fireplace to keep going.
I think it will be easy to make sure it is safe too. Just make sure there is no way for the coffemaker element to get wet. (on he outside) NO danger.
Of course, it will cost you more than $10.