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#1
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Water Heater flushed followed by acrid odor
Hey All,
This past week, I drained and flushed my water heater to get rid of a lot of sediment. When I was done, I refilled the tank, and turned thepower back on. Later on that evening, I went into the laundry room and notice the most acrid odor. At first I though a mouse had got in the room and died. After reading some posts on the newsgroups, I have come to the conclusion that this is the nasty sulphur smell that everyone associated with chemical reactions in water heaters. I ran the hot water out of it about 3 times to no avail. I was looking at some options and was wondering your opinions on the most successful?? Why has it NEVER smelled like that before(even after a drain/flush 2 years ago) but this time it does?? Should I 1) Permanently remove the anode rod and replace with a plug? 2) Pull out the anode rod, dump a cup of chlorine bleach inside, and reinsert the rod? 3) Drain and flush the tank with a hose after pulling the anode rod out?? Thanks Mark |
#2
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Southpaw wrote:
Hey All, This past week, I drained and flushed my water heater to get rid of a lot of sediment. When I was done, I refilled the tank, and turned thepower back on. Later on that evening, I went into the laundry room and notice the most acrid odor. At first I though a mouse had got in the room and died. After reading some posts on the newsgroups, I have come to the conclusion that this is the nasty sulphur smell that everyone associated with chemical reactions in water heaters. I ran the hot water out of it about 3 times to no avail. I was looking at some options and was wondering your opinions on the most successful?? Why has it NEVER smelled like that before(even after a drain/flush 2 years ago) but this time it does?? Should I 1) Permanently remove the anode rod and replace with a plug? 2) Pull out the anode rod, dump a cup of chlorine bleach inside, and reinsert the rod? 3) Drain and flush the tank with a hose after pulling the anode rod out?? Thanks Mark Depends. I had a lot of sulfur odor (well system) due to iron bacteria growth. I kept the anode rod and chlorinated the water- problem solved. There are so many different causes of the odor though that it is a stab in the dark ... YMMV Jim |
#3
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Jim,
Did you do the chlorinate the water through the anode hole?? On Fri, 07 Jan 2005 18:56:09 -0500, Speedy Jim wrote: Southpaw wrote: Hey All, This past week, I drained and flushed my water heater to get rid of a lot of sediment. When I was done, I refilled the tank, and turned thepower back on. Later on that evening, I went into the laundry room and notice the most acrid odor. At first I though a mouse had got in the room and died. After reading some posts on the newsgroups, I have come to the conclusion that this is the nasty sulphur smell that everyone associated with chemical reactions in water heaters. I ran the hot water out of it about 3 times to no avail. I was looking at some options and was wondering your opinions on the most successful?? Why has it NEVER smelled like that before(even after a drain/flush 2 years ago) but this time it does?? Should I 1) Permanently remove the anode rod and replace with a plug? 2) Pull out the anode rod, dump a cup of chlorine bleach inside, and reinsert the rod? 3) Drain and flush the tank with a hose after pulling the anode rod out?? Thanks Mark Depends. I had a lot of sulfur odor (well system) due to iron bacteria growth. I kept the anode rod and chlorinated the water- problem solved. There are so many different causes of the odor though that it is a stab in the dark ... YMMV Jim |
#4
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Southpaw wrote:
Jim, Did you do the chlorinate the water through the anode hole?? Initially I did something like that, maybe once a week. It worked so well, that I cobbled a chemical injection pump to feed a few drops into the well storage tank every time the well pump runs. Jim On Fri, 07 Jan 2005 18:56:09 -0500, Speedy Jim wrote: Southpaw wrote: Hey All, This past week, I drained and flushed my water heater to get rid of a lot of sediment. When I was done, I refilled the tank, and turned thepower back on. Later on that evening, I went into the laundry room and notice the most acrid odor. At first I though a mouse had got in the room and died. After reading some posts on the newsgroups, I have come to the conclusion that this is the nasty sulphur smell that everyone associated with chemical reactions in water heaters. I ran the hot water out of it about 3 times to no avail. I was looking at some options and was wondering your opinions on the most successful?? Why has it NEVER smelled like that before(even after a drain/flush 2 years ago) but this time it does?? Should I 1) Permanently remove the anode rod and replace with a plug? 2) Pull out the anode rod, dump a cup of chlorine bleach inside, and reinsert the rod? 3) Drain and flush the tank with a hose after pulling the anode rod out?? Thanks Mark Depends. I had a lot of sulfur odor (well system) due to iron bacteria growth. I kept the anode rod and chlorinated the water- problem solved. There are so many different causes of the odor though that it is a stab in the dark ... YMMV Jim |
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