Water Heater flooded the shop

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  • Russianwolf
    Veteran Member
    • Jan 2004
    • 3152
    • Martinsburg, WV, USA.
    • One of them there Toy saws

    #1

    Water Heater flooded the shop

    Anyone have a recommendation on a new one? I would love to go tankless, but the timing couldn't be worse. The only one I'd go for needs 3 40 amp double pole circuits and I'd have to hire someone to wire it.

    Damage is minimal, water on the concrete floor, Some wood got wet.
    Mike
    Lakota's Dad

    If at first you don't succeed, deny you were trying in the first place.
  • Uncle Cracker
    The Full Monte
    • May 2007
    • 7091
    • Sunshine State
    • BT3000

    #2
    Yup. The high power requirements are the trade-off on a tankless. There are high-quality commercial grade tanked units available everywhere, but the cost is commensurate. How about a standard unit on a platform with a catchment/drain pan setup?

    Comment

    • Russianwolf
      Veteran Member
      • Jan 2004
      • 3152
      • Martinsburg, WV, USA.
      • One of them there Toy saws

      #3
      UC, I'm not worried about a leak. I just don't understand the need to keep a 40 gallon bottle of water hot all the time when we use it 30 minutes a day. If I had the cash ready, I'd pay the electrician and we be set.

      Right now I'm looking at a $280 Kenmore unit to hold us over until the money is available. It gets good reviews. And I can install it myself.
      Mike
      Lakota's Dad

      If at first you don't succeed, deny you were trying in the first place.

      Comment

      • Uncle Cracker
        The Full Monte
        • May 2007
        • 7091
        • Sunshine State
        • BT3000

        #4
        Over the years, I have had the best luck with Rheem. Never had a failure. I do remember a Whirlpool, a Kenmore (not sure who made it) and a Reliance, all of which had issues.

        Comment

        • just started
          Senior Member
          • Mar 2008
          • 642
          • suburban Philly

          #5
          I've never had a water heater that held on longer than 3 months from the day the warranty ran out.

          Comment

          • jackellis
            Veteran Member
            • Nov 2003
            • 2638
            • Tahoe City, CA, USA.
            • BT3100

            #6
            If you have natural gas or propane, there are a number of tankless water heaters that use either one or both. We considered them for our new place and eventually decided not to. Some things to think about:

            They don't work well when the supply temperature is very low, as it is up here.

            They are kinda spendy.

            There may be a longer-than-usual lag between the time you turn on the tap and hot water comes out. I don't think a recirc system will help.

            You might instead consider spending a little extra to get a better insulated water heater. Also, spend a little DIY time insulating the hot water supply lines wherever you can. Copper pipe coming out of the water heater carries a lot of energy even when it's not carrying hot water to a tap.

            Comment

            • dbhost
              Slow and steady
              • Apr 2008
              • 9523
              • League City, Texas
              • Ryobi BT3100

              #7
              Due to the power requirements, it looks like you have all electric like me. Lousy way to be for sure!

              I replaced mine about 2 years ago with a Whirlpool...

              One thing to be careful about is the physical size of the heater... I didn't notice when I grabbed mine, but the newer 50 gallon heaters are shorter, and larger in diameter. I had to build out the shelf the heater stands on in the laundry room...

              If I had natural gas, I would for sure pony up for a tankless.
              Please like and subscribe to my YouTube channel. Please check out and subscribe to my Workshop Blog.

              Comment

              • woodturner
                Veteran Member
                • Jun 2008
                • 2049
                • Western Pennsylvania
                • General, Sears 21829, BT3100

                #8
                Originally posted by jackellis

                They don't work well when the supply temperature is very low, as it is up here.

                They are kinda spendy.

                There may be a longer-than-usual lag between the time you turn on the tap and hot water comes out. I don't think a recirc system will help.
                A properly sized tankless will work just fine at winter supply temperatures. The issue is that the unit has to have enough capacity to raise the water temperature the number of degrees you want at the flow rate you want to produce the water temperature you want.

                They are expensive, but in many cases will save enough in energy costs to break even, sometimes in months.

                A recirculating system will not help much, but a tankless produces fully heated hotwater within 30 seconds or less, typically. In my experience, that's a little quicker than the tank hot water heater produced less than fully hot water, and much quicker than the tank HWH produces fully hot water.
                --------------------------------------------------
                Electrical Engineer by day, Woodworker by night

                Comment

                • Russianwolf
                  Veteran Member
                  • Jan 2004
                  • 3152
                  • Martinsburg, WV, USA.
                  • One of them there Toy saws

                  #9
                  Old one is out and new Kenmore unit is in.

                  Replaced the old torched fitting with compression fitting so that future work will be easier (if needed). finished the connections and filled the tank. Bled off the air and waited a good 30 minutes checking for leaks. None. Hooked up the wires and turned on the power. Should have hot water in a couple hours.

                  Now the old one, some moron set the thing. The upper element was set a bit higher than the recommended 120 (set to 130, no biggy), but the lower element was set at........ wait for it......... 80 degrees. That's eight zero degrees. The element was never coming on to do it's little "self-cleaning" and of coarse eventually the seal failed. The entire terminal was rusted on the thermometer, I'm lucky not to have been electrocuted.
                  Mike
                  Lakota's Dad

                  If at first you don't succeed, deny you were trying in the first place.

                  Comment

                  • cwithboat
                    Senior Member
                    • Jan 2008
                    • 614
                    • 47deg54.3'N 122deg34.7'W
                    • Craftsman Pro 21829

                    #10
                    Nobody mentioned that there is a significant tax rebate for gas, propane or oil water heaters.
                    regards,
                    Charlie
                    A woman is only a woman, but a good cigar is a smoke.
                    Rudyard Kipling

                    Comment

                    • ragswl4
                      Veteran Member
                      • Jan 2007
                      • 1559
                      • Winchester, Ca
                      • C-Man 22114

                      #11
                      For those of you considering a tankless, I purchased a Noritz 751 (highly rated) locally for $835. Supposed to run 4 showers at once. Downside is the exhaust system parts, 2-12" pipes, one 90 degree elbow and one wall thimble were $300. All in stainless steel (required by installation) ran the price up. Still, its 84% effeciency rating nets us $400 so not bad. Not installed yet, sure hope it works well.
                      RAGS
                      Raggy and Me in San Felipe
                      sigpic

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