Plumbing 101

August 31, 2007

inside a water heater

Filed under: plumber, water heater — ndmuscle123 @ 7:49 am

Inside a Water HeaterIf you were to cut a water heater in half, you would find that it looks something like this (electric on the left, gas on the right):
A gas water heater is nearly identical to an electric water heater, except that it does not contain the two heating elements, but instead has a gas burner at the bottom, with the chimney running up through the middle of the tank.
A water heater consists of the following parts, as shown in the figure above:
A heavy inner steel tank that holds the hot water
Typically, this tank holds 40 to 60 gallons. It has to be able to hold the pressure of a residential water system, which typically runs at 50 to 100 pounds per square inch (psi). The tank is tested to handle 300 psi. The steel tank normally has a bonded glass liner to keep rust out of the water.
Insulation surrounding the tank
A dip tube to let cold water into the tank
A pipe to let hot water out of the tank
A thermostat to control the temperature of the water inside the tank (Many electric water heaters have a separate thermostat on each element.)
Heating elements to heat the water (These are the thick electric elements similar to those you see inside an electric oven.)
A drain valve that allows you to drain the tank to replace the elements or move the tank
A pressure relief valve (This is an important safety feature that keeps the tank from exploding.)
A sacrificial anode rod to help keep the steel tank from corroding
Now let’s see how these all these parts work to provide you with hot water.
tommorow we will look at heating the water heater

August 30, 2007

water heaters

Filed under: Uncategorized — ndmuscle123 @ 9:42 pm

If you own a house, you own a water heater. You probably don’t spend much time thinking about the water heater until, one morning, you go to take a shower and there’s no hot water. Then you probably think about it a lot.
And if you’re the curious sort, the following water-heater question may have crossed your mind: “How can the water stay hot if cold water comes in as soon as you start using the hot water?”
tommrow, we will take a look inside a typical water heater so you can understand how it works and why it sometimes doesn’t.

plumbing 101

Filed under: Uncategorized — ndmuscle123 @ 5:51 pm

here to start bloging about ways i can help people plumb, so they don’t have to pay a arm and a leg.

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