SteveNewHomeOwner
Oct 20, 2005, 08:58 PM
Ok, here's my story:
I moved into a 55-year old house a month ago. It has copper pipes and a 10-year-old 40-gallon lowboy water heater in the crawlspace. The pressure from the city water line is 80psi.
After about a week, I noticed my hot water wasn't staying hot. I called the plumber who came out and replaced the upper thermostat and upper element. This didn't help much, so he came back yesterday and installed a new Whirlpool 40-gallon lowboy. Thankfully, this was all covered by the home warranty. We set both thermostats to 125 degrees.
So this morning I got up and tested the waterat the bathtub, turning the hot on all the way. The plumber had said that my bathtub should fill to the overflow with hot water. The bathtub was slightly more than half-full when the water went cold. This is the same thing that happened with the old water heater.
I called the plumber again, and he said to measure the amount of hot water with a bucket. He said if the water stayed hot for 30 gallons, everything was working properly. My bucket holds 2 gallons, and in total, I got 27 gallons of hot water before the temperature started dropping. By the time I reached 30 gallons, the water was cold. Does that seem like a functioning water heater? By the way, the bathtub is proably about 35 or 40 feet from the water heater. How much would insulating my hot water pipes under the house help?
Also, as I was testing it tonight, I heard a "CLUNK," and the hot water pressure dropped considerably, but only in the bathtub faucet. Our bathtub has the 3 knobs (hot, shower, cold). I pulled the little cap off the hot knob and removed the screw, but the knob didn't come off. Should it just pull off or twist off? From reading in this forum, I'm guessing the plumber knocked some junk loose in the pipes that then ended up somewhere between my bathtub and the rest of the system. Should I try to disassemble the faucet and drain it? The cold water pressure is still fine, and it seems like the shower pressure is OK, so do I just need to work on the hot knob?
Thanks for any and all advice.
Steve.
I moved into a 55-year old house a month ago. It has copper pipes and a 10-year-old 40-gallon lowboy water heater in the crawlspace. The pressure from the city water line is 80psi.
After about a week, I noticed my hot water wasn't staying hot. I called the plumber who came out and replaced the upper thermostat and upper element. This didn't help much, so he came back yesterday and installed a new Whirlpool 40-gallon lowboy. Thankfully, this was all covered by the home warranty. We set both thermostats to 125 degrees.
So this morning I got up and tested the waterat the bathtub, turning the hot on all the way. The plumber had said that my bathtub should fill to the overflow with hot water. The bathtub was slightly more than half-full when the water went cold. This is the same thing that happened with the old water heater.
I called the plumber again, and he said to measure the amount of hot water with a bucket. He said if the water stayed hot for 30 gallons, everything was working properly. My bucket holds 2 gallons, and in total, I got 27 gallons of hot water before the temperature started dropping. By the time I reached 30 gallons, the water was cold. Does that seem like a functioning water heater? By the way, the bathtub is proably about 35 or 40 feet from the water heater. How much would insulating my hot water pipes under the house help?
Also, as I was testing it tonight, I heard a "CLUNK," and the hot water pressure dropped considerably, but only in the bathtub faucet. Our bathtub has the 3 knobs (hot, shower, cold). I pulled the little cap off the hot knob and removed the screw, but the knob didn't come off. Should it just pull off or twist off? From reading in this forum, I'm guessing the plumber knocked some junk loose in the pipes that then ended up somewhere between my bathtub and the rest of the system. Should I try to disassemble the faucet and drain it? The cold water pressure is still fine, and it seems like the shower pressure is OK, so do I just need to work on the hot knob?
Thanks for any and all advice.
Steve.