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#1
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Containing water on the basement floor
I'm in the process of finishing my basement. WRT the floor, we still
haven't decided if we're going to be using vinyl, cork, carpet, or whatever else is available - but that's not important right now. My concern is water. I've done the plastic/duct tape trick and have determined that moisture coming through the floor should not be a problem. The walls don't leak, and the sump pump and battery backup work just fine. My concern is the water heaters. The traditional way to tell when they need to be replaced is to observe the water on the floor. The life expectancy of a mainstream consumer type heater is, perhaps ten years. I have two, which means that I can expect such a puddle an average of once every five years. This will be incompatible with virtually any floor I put down, with the exception of vinyl, which is pretty near the bottom of my desirability list. Is there product that will allow me to build a dam around the water heaters that will keep the water contained in that area, protecting the floor? Perhaps I could build such a dam using commonly available materials? There is a floor drain immediately adjacent to the tanks, so the water would have a place to go. Suggestions/comments? Thanks, Mike |
#2
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Containing water on the basement floor
"Mike Hartigan" wrote in message
.net... The life expectancy of a mainstream consumer type heater is, perhaps ten years. I have two, which means that I can expect such a puddle an average of once every five years. This is not likely. 1. You will get longer life out of your water heaters if you flush them out (removing precipitate) every summer. 2. Leaks are only one form of failure. Others include deterioration of replaceable parts (e.g. heating elements) and irreplaceable parts. 3. If you really believed every heater will leak in its 10th year you could simply replace them at nine-year intervals, thus avoiding all leaks. -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) |
#3
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Containing water on the basement floor
Don Phillipson wrote: "Mike Hartigan" wrote in message .net... The life expectancy of a mainstream consumer type heater is, perhaps ten years. I have two, which means that I can expect such a puddle an average of once every five years. This is not likely. 1. You will get longer life out of your water heaters if you flush them out (removing precipitate) every summer. 2. Leaks are only one form of failure. Others include deterioration of replaceable parts (e.g. heating elements) and irreplaceable parts. 3. If you really believed every heater will leak in its 10th year you could simply replace them at nine-year intervals, thus avoiding all leaks. -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) theres no telling when one will leak but I replace mine early. saves inconvenience and a mess my current tank is nov 2000. time does fly I write the install date on the tank with a marker for easy reference heres MY theory, new tank is under 500 bucks. assume it lasts 10 years, thats 50 bucks per year. Less than the cost of a candy bar a week. why not replace it al 8 years? saves a mess and a hassle done on my schedule not the tanks There are water heater drain pans the heaters sit in with a outlet to drain them, add a water sensor so you KNOW its in trouble. or you could move your heaters to a better less damaging location where a leak wouldnt matter direct vent models are available so noi chimney needed or buy 2 new long warranty heaters NOW, and when the first fails replace the carpet. and the remaining tank after all it will probably be 10 years or longer due for new carpet anyway by that time 12 year warranty tanks are out there...... so long life is available. we replace most things before they are completely dead at very large expense like a car. a hot water tank is a mere nuisance in comparison to a 25K vehicle that liokely doesnt survive 10 years |
#4
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Containing water on the basement floor
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#5
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Containing water on the basement floor
"Don Phillipson" wrote in message
... "Mike Hartigan" wrote in message .net... The life expectancy of a mainstream consumer type heater is, perhaps ten years. I have two, which means that I can expect such a puddle an average of once every five years. This is not likely. 1. You will get longer life out of your water heaters if you flush them out (removing precipitate) every summer. Why summer? |
#6
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Containing water on the basement floor
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#7
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Containing water on the basement floor
replace tank early every 5 years or so
ceramic tile or other floor not damaged by water reloate tanks to area that cant damage anything use tank drip pans drains and water alarms in case of leak make sure your homeowners will cover any damage when and if it occurs |
#8
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Containing water on the basement floor
wrote in message
oups.com... replace tank early every 5 years or so ceramic tile or other floor not damaged by water reloate tanks to area that cant damage anything use tank drip pans drains and water alarms in case of leak make sure your homeowners will cover any damage when and if it occurs Who are you responding to? |
#9
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Containing water on the basement floor
As a comment for everyone, remember that life expectancy for water
heaters depends greatly on the water. Where I live, I can expect ten to fifteen years from a cheap contractor grade water heater. Most places would be doing good to get half that. I don't think anyone in my 100 home development has had to replace one yet. Also consider your water conditions as well as the volume of water you use and the temperature you keep the heater at when trying to determine useful life. -- Joseph Meehan Dia 's Muire duit |
#10
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Containing water on the basement floor
Mike Hartigan wrote: In article . com, says... Don Phillipson wrote: .... There are water heater drain pans the heaters sit in with a outlet to drain them, add a water sensor so you KNOW its in trouble. Sounds perfect! Unfortunately, I used solid copper pipe when I installed these, so I wouldn't be able to simply slide them under the tanks without doing some plumbing work. While not a BIG problem, I was hoping for something simpler. This may, nevertheless, be the route that I eventually take. .... Will need to plumb in a drain line anyway if you are intending to make this nearly foolproof (and, of course, that still doesn't account for the possible relief valve letting go some time), so unless there's a local drain that you could essentially turn into a shower floor type basin by pouring a lip around, there's still plumbing to be done since there's no way the drip pan will hold more than a few gallons at most. While doing it, modify the plumbing connections to either use a union if keep the hard copper or make a transition w/ the flexible lines designed specifically for water heaters so when you do need to replace one it is a doable chore w/o soldering required at that time... On the original note, if there's a requirement for a sump pump in a basement, I'd certainly not be satisfied that there's no moisture problem for flooring w/o significant preparation solely by the plastic sheet test for a few days...that's indicative you may be able to solve the moisture problem but isn't anyways close to a conclusive test. In other words, it's kinda' like the old math theorem phrase--"necessary, but not sufficient." |
#11
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Containing water on the basement floor
JoeSpareBedroom wrote: wrote in message oups.com... replace tank early every 5 years or so ceramic tile or other floor not damaged by water reloate tanks to area that cant damage anything use tank drip pans drains and water alarms in case of leak make sure your homeowners will cover any damage when and if it occurs Who are you responding to? the OP who is concerned with water damaging his floor........... |
#13
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Containing water on the basement floor
The first time I had to replace my water heater, I installed 1/2" sweat
unions on the cold and hot lines which made it easy when I had to replace that one. -- Have a Great Week ! Check Winter Haven's Current Weather http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/...er+Haven+33881 "Mike Hartigan" wrote in message .net... I'm in the process of finishing my basement. WRT the floor, we still haven't decided if we're going to be using vinyl, cork, carpet, or whatever else is available - but that's not important right now. My concern is water. I've done the plastic/duct tape trick and have determined that moisture coming through the floor should not be a problem. The walls don't leak, and the sump pump and battery backup work just fine. My concern is the water heaters. The traditional way to tell when they need to be replaced is to observe the water on the floor. The life expectancy of a mainstream consumer type heater is, perhaps ten years. I have two, which means that I can expect such a puddle an average of once every five years. This will be incompatible with virtually any floor I put down, with the exception of vinyl, which is pretty near the bottom of my desirability list. Is there product that will allow me to build a dam around the water heaters that will keep the water contained in that area, protecting the floor? Perhaps I could build such a dam using commonly available materials? There is a floor drain immediately adjacent to the tanks, so the water would have a place to go. Suggestions/comments? Thanks, Mike |
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