View Full Version : Feeling hot hot (water) and then it is not at all hot
cantags
May 29, 2007, 06:03 PM
We have scalding hot water for a couple of minutes and then it cuts off . We have a state water heater model e5650dols. We set our temperature lower and reset the unit only to have it replicate the same problem. Is this due to the theromostat if so is it the lower or the upper. How do you tell?? Is this a plumbing problem or an electrical one. Thank you!
letmetellu
May 29, 2007, 07:48 PM
If you call a smart plumber he will be able to diagnose the problem and do what ever it takes to repair it. If you call an electrician he will diagnose the problem but more than likely he will not do anything about the problem because he is not a plumber and that is not his job description.
And yes it is more than likely that it is a bad element but unless you know a lot about electricity and have some meters to work with I can't tell you how to find the problem.
RichardBondMan
May 29, 2007, 08:05 PM
I am not a plubmer but can tell you my recent personal experiences and give you my opinion but it's only that, my opionion based on recent experiences with my hot water heater. It sounds like the heater is cutting itself off since it is overheating. There should be a reset button inside the cover for the upper thermostat and if you press it, you will hear an audible click meaning the water heater is once again heating your water. More than likely, the water heater will heat the water until it's scalding hot, then it will cut itself off once again. The upper thermostate probably has a sensing device that tell the lower thermostat when to cut off, on. Either the upper or lower thermostat is defective and needs replacing or it could be that of the two elements is bad but I don't think so as they appearently are heating the water. I would read some of the posts here and at waterheaterrescue.com, see if that helps. There is a way to test the thermostats and the elements using a meter but it's beyond me honestly to advise you on that, besides you are dealing with lots of voltage that could be very dangerous (always cut off the power source and ck to make sure the power is off due to the hazard of eletrical shock). I can tell you, it's very easy to replace the thermostats but replacing the two elements is just as easy but more involved as you must drain the water heater. Might ask yourself how old the heater is since the likelihood of needing new elements usually increases as the heater gets older. If the heater is an older heater, also perhaps not in obvious good condition such as rusting out, I might consider a new heater if I were in your situation.
labman
May 29, 2007, 09:07 PM
Do you have an anti scald valve anywhere that could be malfunctioning? All the water at the top of the tank should be about the same temperature. A malfunctioning thermostat or element should leave all the water the wrong temperature around it. The dip tube could be bad. If so, incoming cold water will go straight across the top of the tank and out the outlet quickly replacing hot water with cold. A plumber can find and fix that.