any of you handy men want to make some money? i'll pay for a diagnosis/estimate for repair. ASAP would be preferred. cold showers SUCK!!
7/16/2008 12:00:18 PM
electric or gas?
7/16/2008 12:08:40 PM
Why would you heat hot water?
7/16/2008 1:10:42 PM
electric or gas
7/16/2008 1:21:35 PM
^
7/16/2008 2:02:54 PM
if all you had was cold water, you would be used to taking cold showers. in fact, they would probably just call them showers.cut the AC off, open the windows, get some fans. that should help.
7/16/2008 2:08:31 PM
leave garden hose out in sun all day, take shower in yard...profit!
7/16/2008 2:41:23 PM
Diagnosis: It's fucked.Repair: $300-1200
7/16/2008 2:56:51 PM
I'll assume for some reason it is electric.but some more info IS needed. how old is it?Does it have something like a control box (I'm getting at electronic control, as opposed to old school thermostat)check the breaker box....breaker tripped?check control box.....all indicator lights out?a lot of heaters have little LED's on the heating elements (there are two)but if it was just one element out you would still have some degree of hot water.check to see if one or both are on or off.I had a little relay go out on my W.H. that I fixed for about 6 bucks.
7/16/2008 5:31:58 PM
luckily, the garage holds one BBR: licensed plumbing contractor at your service. hit me with a pm.
7/17/2008 3:23:39 AM
7/17/2008 7:07:08 AM
OK I'll try to be more specific.WH in my previous home had an led indicator located where each of the two elements were located. They would light when each of the elements were heating as a diagnostic feature.My current heater has a control module on top. (OK you can call it a thermostat, but it also has built in diagnostics. it will report if an element is bad, etc) The relay that I replaced was the interface between the solid state logic circuit and the elements. Matched the part from mouser.com and swapped it on the circuit board. So I'm pretty fucking proud of myself.Cheap DIY fix, and I don't think any plumber would be doing any circuit board work!More like replace the whole control unit or "Oh you gonna need a whole new heater"
7/17/2008 9:06:23 AM
There is no point in a hot water heater anyway ... you should be fineIf the water is hot you shouldn't need to heat it.Sorry i hate people that say it... its either a boiler (i never understood that either if its not a steam boiler nothing boils so why is it called a boiler?) or a water heater.yes hit up bbr and you'll be done..[Edited on July 17, 2008 at 9:37 AM. Reason : .]
7/17/2008 9:33:05 AM
sorry guys. i was traveling to seattle when this happened and my fiance ended up getting a plumber to replace the hot water heater. it was an electric one, i think the original HWH from 1984. the tank had ruptured. he replaced it and hauled off the old one for $850. hey BBR give me your contact info so i can give you a call in the future for any plumbing needs.
7/20/2008 8:40:44 PM
$850 is a decent price. as long as he didn't use a GE HWH. those things are shit.
7/20/2008 9:18:09 PM
state w.h. ftw
7/21/2008 12:47:50 AM
^^^pm sent. you're pretty damn lucky if it was that old, ~24 years is more than a full life for most tanks.^^eh, 95% of "conventional" electric and gas heaters these days are junk and built as cheaply as possible. especially what the average joe can get from lowes/home depot. there's actually only just a few companies that make them too, they're just marketed under lots of different brands.^yeah, that's what we mostly put in for conventional stuff. that or rheem-ruud. they're both two of the parent companies mentioned above and have been around a loooong time. some of those old bastards used to last 40-50 years. my parents had a state in their house that lasted from the mid 70's to around 2000. my grandmother's house has a ruudglas that was in the house when they bought it circa 1960 (so at least 48 years old or more) and it's still kicking. most of the ones that old are gone by now, but you still run across one every once in a while. if there's any industry where the statement "they don't make em like the used to" holds true, it's water heaters (and appliances in general really).
7/21/2008 1:59:20 AM
are tankless water heaters really the shit, or are there drawbacks i'm not aware of?
7/21/2008 2:21:48 AM
yep. the initial investment of the unit and labor on the install can be a bit of a shock, but the benefits quickly overshadow it. not to mention they'll eventually pay for themselves in energy savings (sometimes very quickly depending on the exact situation) and they qualify you for a tax savings/writeoff. in some municipalities, such as durham, the utility companies even give you an additional discount of a few percent off your bill each month for having energy star compliant stuff.
7/21/2008 2:49:52 AM
but they are loud.
7/21/2008 10:43:43 AM
yeah, the combustion blower motors can be kinda loud on some of them when they initially fire. units like the one i linked above sound like little miniature jet engines firing up. makes sense though, they operate under the same basic principles as a thermojet/motorjet. i've never known it to really be an issue for anyone though, and they're certainly quieter than other things in a home like hvac units. even conventional gas heaters, especially powered direct vents, aren't silent either.
7/21/2008 5:04:19 PM