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Clare Snyder Clare Snyder is offline
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Default Drain Valve Type On New House Water Heater ?

On Thu, 26 Apr 2018 11:16:30 -0400, wrote:

On Thu, 26 Apr 2018 09:44:42 -0400, Clare Snyder
wrote:

On Thu, 26 Apr 2018 08:05:03 -0400, Wade Garrett
wrote:

On 4/26/18 7:11 AM, Robert11 wrote:
Hi Folks,

Have just had a new Bradford White water heater installed for house.
The very typical thing; 40 gal, upright cylinder. Gas fired.

Question: The drain valve on the very bottom is of a kind I've never seen
before.

Rather than the what I had assumed is "typical," this one has the treaded fitting for a hose,
but the top is a rather small, threaded, stem with a slot in it for apparently a screwdriver.

No typical stem with a handle on the top, like "before".

What is this new kind of valve drain valve ?

How does one use it ?
Mutli turn, or,...?

Why did they go to this type; pros and cons of ?

As always, much thanks,
Bob

Same on my recently installed new water heater. Maybe the mfr is saving
money by not installing a faucet handle- or discouraging owners from
draining out a few gallons every few months.



Aparently in some places it is a "safety requirement" so kids can't
accidently, while playing around, open the valve and scald themselves.
My 2011 GE has the same.

At least mine is BRASS, unlike the cheap plastic crap on my last one
- - -


As long as you have "good" water, brass is fine but if you have well
water like mine you should throw that brass one away before you
install the heater and put in a plastic "boiler" valve. Otherwise, in
a year or two it won't be a valve anymore. It will just be a plug.

It does make me wonder why that valve in the water heater is any more
dangerous for kids than the one in the kitchen sink tho. These nanny
state assholes are out of control.

lkittle kids who cannot reach the kitchen tap can reach the drain
valve and it is SO inviting with the handle - and the scalding hot
water is IMMEDIATE.

In kitchen sink it takes a few seconds to get that hot -