 |
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Feb 26, 2008, 06:47 PM
|
|
Reduced hot water pressure
I just bought a 10 year old house a few months ago and about a week ago my hot water pressure dropped by about half. We have a gas hot water heater that was inspected before the home was purchased and was deemed in good working order. I've checked all the water lines around the hot water tank and the surrounding area and see no leaks of any kind to explain the loss of pressure. My cold water seems fine, and I'm still getting some hot water, just not full strength. We do tend to have hard water in the city I live in... so could it be mineral build up? If so, how would I rectify this? The winters also get pretty cold here, but the weather has been pretty mild the past several weeks so I'm not sure if the "thaw" might have attributed to anything. Any suggestions?
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Feb 26, 2008, 06:53 PM
|
|
 Originally Posted by newbiechick
I just bought a 10 year old house a few months ago and about a week ago my hot water pressure dropped by about half. We have a gas hot water heater that was inspected before the home was purchased and was deemed in good working order. I've checked all the water lines around the hot water tank and the surrounding area and see no leaks of any kind to explain the loss of pressure. My cold water seems fine, and I'm still getting some hot water, just not full strength. We do tend to have hard water in the city I live in...so could it be mineral build up? If so, how would I rectify this? The winters also get pretty cold here, but the weather has been pretty mild the past several weeks so I'm not sure if the "thaw" might have attributed to anything. Any suggestions?
Have you noticed a pressure change in just one faucet or all? Could be a partial blockage in faucet if just one. I took the bottom element out of my water heater and using what looks like an icing spatula for doing cakes I scooped about 5 gallons of lime chips out of my water heater. Looking back I should have just replaced it. However my problem was causing my element to burn out and lower volume of my heater than the rating... did not affect my pressure. Hope this helps.
|
|
 |
Senior Plumbing Expert
|
|
Feb 26, 2008, 09:02 PM
|
|
Hey Newbie.
Could be a few things.
First, I will assume you mean every faucet in the home.. yes? If not, please let me know.
If every faucet in home, I would start by flushing that water heater... so easy to do. Here, you hook reasonable quality garden hose to water heater drain (at base of heater) and WITH WATER ON just open the water heater drain and let drain full bore to outside somewhere for 5 minutes. That should flush out sediment in tank (be aware here that after you flush heater IF water heater drain leaks it is because sediment got caught in drain.. so may need to cap with a brass hose cap with washer (available at all home supply stores).. so be prepared when you do this.)
If that did not fix it.. then I start at next place.. look at shutoff into heater.. that is involved... requires cutting into pipes.. let us know if you want to tackle this.
Has anyone worked in the house/building lately?
It may simply be that ten years later the inlet/outlet to the heater have been chocked down by electrolytic deposit... that is, that dissimilar metals cause electrolytic/deposition of ions/metals, etc... and that big hole has become small hole... BUT would need to look at inlet/outlet of heater to ascertain that.
Has the city/town worked on hydrants in you neighborhood lately (quick call)? If so, then not a surprise to hear of reduced pressure... check on that, too.
See what YOU can do... let us know. Good night!
If this helped, please RATE THIS ANSWER Thank you.
|
|
Question Tools |
Search this Question |
|
|
Add your answer here.
Check out some similar questions!
Reduced water pressure after installing new water heater
[ 8 Answers ]
Quick history:
1. House is about 85 yrs old, two kitchens, two baths, and a laundry room sink near the water heater. Visible water main into the house is copper, however, after the water filter unit (with no filter element) is another foot of copper connected to galvanized piping.
2. Last...
Hot water pressure reduced in kitchen sink
[ 2 Answers ]
My pressure is reduced only on my hot water in the kitchen sink, I have a Delta Single lever faucet. We've been here about 2 years and all worked fine until a few months ago, it appears to be fairly new plumbing (about 6 to 8 years old) How do I repair this problem.
Thank You.
Cold water pressure in my shower greatly reduced.
[ 9 Answers ]
Hi
Tom, Glad to hear your getting back to your old self.
We've been rooting for you!
I have repeadley dismantled and flushed my delta single knob.
Tom's sugestion from a few year ago. It worked very well until recently.
When the faucet is apart and I plug one of the 2 flow holes, -...
Reduced water pressure after installation of new water heater (entire house)
[ 6 Answers ]
Hello,
We just had a new water heater installed yesterday and the water pressure seems to be reduced (probably 85-90%) of the prior level, through out the entire house. Our old water heater started to leak yesterday AM, had the new one installed that afternoon (40 gallon, 9 year wty, gas: GE...
Reduced hot water pressure
[ 2 Answers ]
First question here, thanks in advance for any responses.
Basically, I have lost pressure from all the hot water taps/shower in my house.
Boiler seems to be working okay - water is actually hot but initially comes out as usual for half a second when turning taps on, but then slows to a...
View more questions
Search
|