|
If you've
taken all this into consideration and you're still unhappy,
maybe it's time for a new water heater. In that case, head
to Choosing
a water heater.
Distance
If you
have a big house and the water heater is on one end and your
bathroom is on the other, get used to frustration. We had
a friend with this situation and he was waiting what seems
like an eternity (to him, at least) for the shower to turn
hot. That's because there's about a hundred feet of piping
lying between his shower and the water heater. When he started
his shower, all the water in that piping that had cooled off
had to be run out the shower and new hot water drawn from
the tank before he could step in.
The usual
solution is a pump- or gravity-feed recirculation system,
Metlund
device or something like it, to keep hot water circulating
in piping all the time. There's a tradeoff here. You cut down
on water use (all that cold water doesn't have to go down
the drain in order to draw hot from the tank), but you increase
your standby heat loss and thus, energy bill, because that
circulating water is constantly radiating away heat. It helps
to insulation the pipes, if you can.
In our
friend's case, we found that he actually had a recirc line
and pump that he didn't know about. Apparently it had been
shut off when the house went into escrow. Made all the difference...
The dip tube
"The
dip what?" you might say. In every water heater, there
is a plastic tube parked in the cold port that brings cold
water to the bottom of the tank to be heated -- and preventing
it from mixing with already-heated water in the top of the
tank.
If that
falls into the tank or splits or breaks, then cold mixes with
hot and suddenly your water heater doesn't work nearly as
well as before.
There's
a ton of Americans out there who know all about this because
of a debacle a few years ago. The company that makes most
of the dip tubes in this country changed its formula for the
plastic. The new plastic was prone to disintegrate in certain
conditions. The operative time period was August 1983 to March
1986. Aside from gradually or suddenly having much less hot
water, the telltale was finding bits of plastic clogging faucet
aerators.
There
was a scandal, class-action suit, and settlement. But the
terms of that expired several years ago, so if you find you
have the problem, all you can do is try to deal with it. Even
after replacing the dip tube and flushing the tank, you might
still find plastic bits for awhile. But at least the water
will again be hot.
Debacles
aside, you should also be aware that even good plastic will
eventually become brittle with age and hot water. We've found
dip tubes in old water heaters that were split and broken.
It's entirely possible for a water heater to outlive its dip
tube. Simply replacing this inexpensive part can restore your
tank's function to new and save you the cost of a new heater.
So think about that before you run out and buy a new one if
you experience this problem.
|