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[email protected] January 27th 06 06:06 PM

Life of a water heater
 
I have a 7-year old A.O.Smith 40 gal water heater. Works fine, but I've
only drained it out once about 4 years ago. Assuming that that water
heaters last about 8-10 years, I have some questions
- how often should I be draining and cleaning it out?
- does regular draining help prolong its life?
- how does one tell that it's ready to break (instead of finding out
when the basement is flooded with hot water)?
Thanks
Mark Sabatini


J. David Boyd January 27th 06 08:14 PM

Life of a water heater
 
writes:

I have a 7-year old A.O.Smith 40 gal water heater. Works fine, but I've
only drained it out once about 4 years ago. Assuming that that water
heaters last about 8-10 years, I have some questions
- how often should I be draining and cleaning it out?
- does regular draining help prolong its life?
- how does one tell that it's ready to break (instead of finding out
when the basement is flooded with hot water)?


Be sure to check your anode rod. Our's rotted away at just about the seven
year mark, and started filling the pipes with little balls of aluminum,
clogging everything. Very annoying.

Water heaters last much longer than 8-10 years. My grandmother has one that is
at least 40 years old, we've had to replace the heating elements a few times.
My dad had one that was ~ 20 years old before it had to be replace.

Dave

Speedy Jim January 27th 06 09:57 PM

Life of a water heater
 
J. David Boyd wrote:
writes:


I have a 7-year old A.O.Smith 40 gal water heater. Works fine, but I've
only drained it out once about 4 years ago. Assuming that that water
heaters last about 8-10 years, I have some questions
- how often should I be draining and cleaning it out?
- does regular draining help prolong its life?
- how does one tell that it's ready to break (instead of finding out
when the basement is flooded with hot water)?



Be sure to check your anode rod. Our's rotted away at just about the seven
year mark, and started filling the pipes with little balls of aluminum,
clogging everything. Very annoying.

Water heaters last much longer than 8-10 years. My grandmother has one that is
at least 40 years old, we've had to replace the heating elements a few times.
My dad had one that was ~ 20 years old before it had to be replace.

Dave


Ah. There is a *huge* difference between the life of
an electric heater vs. gas. The average life of a gas heater
today is about 10 yrs.

Monthly flushing (only need take 1 Gal out) of a gas heater
will help a lot by preventing solids forming on the bottom
of the shell. If the heater hasn't been flushed regularly,
it's virtually impossible to remove the scale buildup which
has already hardened.

Jim

Clark W. Griswold, Jr. January 28th 06 12:42 AM

Life of a water heater
 
wrote:

I have a 7-year old A.O.Smith 40 gal water heater. Works fine, but I've
only drained it out once about 4 years ago. Assuming that that water
heaters last about 8-10 years, I have some questions


That's a generalization that doesn't necessarily hold up. Water heater life
depends on a number of factors, including how hot you run it, how much mineral
content there is in the water and how clean the water is.

- how often should I be draining and cleaning it out?


You don't usually need to drain it completely, but attaching a hose to teh drain
port and running the hose until the water is clear once a year is typical.

- does regular draining help prolong its life?


Yes. A major failure mode is mineral content building up at the bottom of the
tank. That makes the burner have to run longer to heat the water, if you have a
gas heater. Running the burner longer (or hotter) causes the tank to fail.
Electric heaters tend to fail from mineral buildup on the electrodes. Those can
be replaced.

Another common failure is the dip tube breaking. That allows cold water to
immediately exit the heater into the house instead at the bottom of the heater
where it can be heated first. People usually compensate by cranking up the temp
which casuse the tank to fail.

Electrode failure in an electric heater depends on if the top or the bottom
electrode fails. If the top one fails, you get very slow recovery time. If the
bottom one fails, you get slow recoveryand half the amount of hot water.

- how does one tell that it's ready to break (instead of finding out
when the basement is flooded with hot water)?


I've had heaters with pin hole leaks that lasted long enough for me to replace
them a few days later. If you see *any* condensation like symptoms on the floor,
time is running out.

Mineral build up symptoms are a crackling noise when the burner runs. Other than
the dip tube problem where the water gets cold too fast, I doubt there's any
other way to tell.

[email protected] January 28th 06 12:25 PM

Life of a water heater
 
As was already pointed out, you should check the anode rod every few
years. This is a sacrificial anode that is there to corrode away
instead of the tank. The rate of decay of the rod depends on the
content of the water, temp, any stray electrical current, etc. If you
replace the rod before it's gone, that will extend the life of the
tank. And also, as was pointed out, the life of an electric tank is
typically a lot longer than that of a gas one.



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