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DerbyDad03 DerbyDad03 is offline
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Default A genuine home repair question.

On Friday, May 21, 2021 at 9:29:43 PM UTC-4, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
On 5/21/2021 7:54 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Thursday, May 20, 2021 at 11:48:22 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Thu, 20 May 2021 18:10:27 -0700, Bob F wrote:

On 5/20/2021 4:51 PM, wrote:
About a month ago my water heater (4ish years old) T&P valve popped off and wouldn't re-seal, so I replaced it. No issues for about a month, now it's dripping. I can"burp it" but drips again in a little bit. I'm wondering if I need to turn the temp down, I'ts where ever the factory set it, seems pretty hot. Not overly hot but hot. Thoughts??


Is there an expansion tank associated with this heater? It could have
failed.
That is my guess, if there is even a tank installed.
Back in the olden days the water expanded back into the system but now
they have back flow preventers and the expanded water has nowhere to
go.


Well, it's not a "timing" thing, it's a "system" thing.

Not all houses, even in these modern times, have backflow preventers.

Yeah, but most new ones do, especially if you have irrigation. My gas
fired water heat has an expansion tank too. Thousands of house built
here have them. Unheard of years ago it is now code many places.


I get that.

I was only commenting on the use of the words €śBack in the olden days
the water expanded back into the system...€ť

In millions and millions of houses the water *still* expands back into the
system. Like I said, its not a €śtiming€ť thing. What happened in the olden
days still happens, in many, many cases, today. Only the OP can tell us
how his house is set up.

I do find it interesting that the OP is handy enough to replace the T&P valve
but he apparently hasnt ever stuck a thermometer under a faucet.