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trader_4 trader_4 is offline
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Default A genuine home repair question.

On Saturday, May 22, 2021 at 11:39:14 AM UTC-4, wrote:
On Saturday, May 22, 2021 at 7:31:01 AM UTC-5, trader_4 wrote:
On Friday, May 21, 2021 at 10:09:46 PM UTC-4, DerbyDad03 wrote:
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.

Just knowing basic physics goes a long way. Heat water, it expands. Why don't
all pressure relief valves open? Water has somewhere to go. Where does it go
in my house? If you have a well with a tank, the tank is where it goes. If you
have municipal water, it goes there, unless you have a backflow preventer.
Like you pointed out, my house doesn't, nor do most homes here. New ones,
IDK. If you have a BF preventer and no expansion tank or a water logged one,
pressure is exceeded and valve opens. Haven't heard from the OP again.
Maybe the WH blew?

No expansion tank, Back flow preventer? I don't think so.


Does that mean you looked and you don't have them or you didn't look
and are guessing?

This house was built in1981. as I said it's 5 yr old heater. No other issues until
I replaced the TP valve .


You said you replaced that one because it opened. Now the new one is dripping.
That suggests that temp or pressure is the problem. But it could also be that the
new valve is defective. Since you can't measure the temp or pressure, the possible
paths a

Buy a thermometer and a cheap pressure gauge that you can connect to a spigot
on the system.

Buy a new TP valve

Make a likely determination based on what you see. If the water does not
seem extremely hot coming out of a faucet, it's not a temp problem. If the
pressure does not appear to be very high at faucets, spigots, etc, it's probably
not a pressure problem.

Try turning down the temperature on the tank, does that stop it? If not,
leave a faucet with a tiny stream flowing and see if that stops it. If not,
then it's a faulty TPR.





The second heater n the house does not blow off. I believe The pressure regulator is set to 35-40 PSI. Rural city water. I have not checked the temp, i'm not sure i have a thermometer to do that with....