The left side.
As you are looking at it, the hot is on the left.
Looking at it as you would be if using it, the hot is on the left side.
The isolation valve should (must) be placed on the cold water side (and/or the return side), entering the water heater. Placing the isolation valve on the hot or outlet side of the water heater has the potential of creating a bomb.
Standard instillation of a washer identifies the valve s as hot on the left, cold water on the right. In any water instillation, the standards are hot on the left and cold on the right.
This is probably a pressure imbalance problem or you have air in the lines. see the related video link provided.
The hot water goes on the left side.
In most faucets, the hot water is on the left side.
The hot water is typically located on the left side.
Hot water is typically on the left side of the faucet.
The hot water is typically located on the left side.
Hot water typically goes on the left side when you turn on a faucet.
The hot side of a faucet is connected to the hot water supply, which is heated, while the cold side is connected to the cold water supply. The hot side releases water at a higher temperature, while the cold side releases water at a lower temperature.
Hot water is typically on the left side of a faucet, while cold water is on the right side.
The left side of a faucet typically produces hot water.
The left side of the faucet typically dispenses hot water.
Hot water is typically found on the left side of a standard faucet.
The left side of the faucet is typically associated with hot water, while the right side is associated with cold water.