75 gallon " STATE" gas hot water heater tank. 10 years. No problems. Knock on wood. Will keep flushing 2X a year.
You can use a flexible pipe for the natural gas as well???I think I splurged and paid $900 for the Rheem I have now. Installed myself with $50 worth of fittings. Hassle free and reliable for 6 years.
Sept 2019:
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I had to replace that old softener just a couple weeks later too. Also DIY, also paid about $900. Super happy with both softener and heater.
looks professionalSo the technician said we dodged a bullet and that the supply line was primed to rupture at any day. They just pulled snapped it off.
New unit is in and we're good for another decade.
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Yes, there are products specifically engineered (and approved by code) for the stub outs to major appliances.You can use a flexible pipe for the natural gas as well???
Keep on eye on those ProPress fittings. Lots of anecdotes of them working loose and migrating along the pipe until they leak. I think most of them were initial installs using thinner wall pipe and may have been improperly installed on M copper instead of L.So the technician said we dodged a bullet and that the supply line was primed to rupture at any day. They just pulled snapped it off.
New unit is in and we're good for another decade.
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In most jurisdictions, flexible CONNECTORS are allowed to connect from the piping system to an appliance. Some place allow flexible piping behind walls, such as CSST....... some require hard metallic piping in walls.You can use a flexible pipe for the natural gas as well???
And they cost you money by having a nearly impossible to initially light design with a flame arrestor detection circuit that fails and a plastic drain valve that fails the first time you use it and by having a blowoff that also fails.Modern gas water heaters use an electronic ignitor that doesn't use household current or a battery to power it. They save you money by not having a pilot light burning 24/7/365.
all correctAnd they cost you money by having a nearly impossible to initially light design with a flame arrestor detection circuit that fails and a plastic drain valve that fails the first time you use it and by having a blowoff that also fails.
The internal mixer valve that prevents warm enough water from being dispensed in low pressure situations With no adjustment is also great.
incorrectThey save you money by not having a pilot light burning 24/7/365.
I got one too and man you should see the crud that comes out now. I do the full flush using the supply line to agitate the tank more as is described in one of the videos for it. Works like a charm. Couple other things; plumber I used will not use anything but hard copper pipe and sweated connections on a WH install. He said that when he tried other methods, he always got callbacks. Never with hard line old school copper plumbing methods though. My tank DOES have a pilot, but "electronic" ignition via a piezo igniter. No outlet/batteries needed. House was built without an expansion tank on it, but one was installed a year later when the warranty inspector noticed it and said it should ALWAYS have one.I purchased the sediment buster and it works great...you can inject air pressure to help break up the sediment...and it is clear plastic so you can see the crude come out...got mine on Amazon.com..
AND haven't the igniters been around now for 15 years+? This is price gouge by everyone during and after covid. IE kinda like Redline oil going from $12+ a QT to $18 in 3 years.Modern gas water heaters use an electronic ignitor that doesn't use household current or a battery to power it. They save you money by not having a pilot light burning 24/7/365.
CA is the opposite. Must be flex due to earthquakesIn New York, gas hot water heaters must be hard piped. No flex. Don't know the codes for other states. Only gas dryers and stoves can have flex tubing in New York.
CA also requires earthquake strapping for water heaters.CA is the opposite. Must be flex due to earthquakes
Ya those are nice. They allow a house to be built relatively well since there's no threat of back draftingThe most expensive gas heater lately was what they call a direct vent heater. 50 gallon wholesale cost with tax was $2,650.00
Installed was around $4,000. And that was with a break because they were someone that we have known for a long time. Took two men nearly a day to pick it up, and do the install due to an awkward placement.