What is the function of the diode in a gas hotwatwer heater and should it be replaced every two year
las vegas
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What is the function of the diode in a gas hotwatwer heater and should it be replaced every two year
las vegas
Only thing I can think of is that a flame rectifies and this is how to tell if there is a pilot so that the main gas valve can open.
Otherwise, clueless.
I am not questioning your knowledge of water heaters but could you be talking about an anode rod that goes into the water heater tank.
If so they do deterioate over time and it would not hurt to check it to see if it is almost gone.
If this is not the object of your question I apologize for my stupidity.
Letme isn't stupid, I think the poster just used or heard the wrong word. Heater have an anode , a stink rod, a sacrificial rod which protects the tank's lining from your LV water.
The only other thing that I can think of where the poster would have used the word "diode" is that some of the anti-explosion water heaters have a safety cut off built into the thermocouple line that is in the heating chamber and if the flames starts to roll and over heats the heating area it will snap the protector off. This requires that the thermocouple be replaced and the problem that caused the overheating to be repaired.
Water contains ions (Say sodium and clorine from salt) for instance.
When yiou combine ions with dissimilar metals you get a battery. When you get a battery, you have corrosion.
An example is salt used on the roads in the winter time combined with water create rust if not washed off.
You can take a lemon and insert two disimilar metals in it and come up with a voltage or a small battery.
There are all sorts of disimilar metals in a water system, for instance solder and copper. This has the potential of creating a small battery.
By carefully selecting the material, usually magnesium, you can "tell" a system to preferentially corrode this. It's kind of like the path of least resistance.
The anode is just a hunk of magnesium, sometimes other metals, that hangs in your tank. This rod corroods first, thus preventing holes in other parts of your water system. The ions are used up in the conversion.
Chlorine ions might be sucked up by the magnesium to form Magnesium Chloride instead of, for instance, copper chloride thi preventing damage to copper plumbing.
Short answer, something has to corrode and the anode is there to be the first and only thing to corrode rather than the tank. The anode is cheap and easy to replace so we call it sacrificial.
And here's what they're talking about. (see image)
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