When Should A Water Heater Be Replaced?

When does a water heater need to be replaced and should it be replaced at all? Is it when it starts leaking? When it reaches 10 years old? Is it dangerous to have an old water heater? In this video I address all these questions, along with some of the common reasons people replace their water heaters when they could have simply fixed it. Or even worse, they simply replaced it out of fear that it will start to leak and flood the house. Other reasons include not enough hot water, popping noises, smelly water, coming on with a band, and not being efficient. Anyway that's it for the video summary, please let me know your thought about all this in the comments section!
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#furnace #airconditioner #appliancerepair #heating #airconditioning #hvac #wordofadvicetv #waterheater #waterheaterreplacement #plumbing #plumber

Пікірлер: 315

  • @karendonoher-rager7635
    @karendonoher-rager76352 ай бұрын

    THANK YOU! I'm a widow & now that I have to depend on the kindness of strangers helping me with problems that my husband could fix, I worry more. You just put my fears regarding my water heater to rest. I will now subscribe to your channel for future help. 😊

  • @xpump876
    @xpump8766 ай бұрын

    This posting was very reassuring my concerns. (I still have some though) Our Water heater was installed 39 years ago in 1984. Hot Water has been consistently good & available. The anode rod has long since been sacrificed and I'm not aware of any maintenance in the last decade. I had discussed replacing it w/ my spouse but she's pretty adamant that if it’s not broke don’t fix it. I think 80's they made much better Water heaters than the junk available today with its planned obsolescence. Im afraid to touch it worrying that it will then there-after start misbehaving. I setup water alarm system and the unit is mounted on a drain pad. We will replace it someday. This posting took away the nagging "bottom dropping out" catastrophe fear .

  • @robg4383
    @robg4383 Жыл бұрын

    Great info on your videos. Just FYI, The INSURANCE companies are NOW REQUIRING homeowners to REPLACE the water heater if it is 15 years old or old, REGARDLESS if there is no issue. Another RIP off for homeowners being subjected to being controlled by them. I was required to do so. Many of the companies I inquired with refused to even consider insuring my home unless I did so. Naturally, they are also sending inspectors to check out the home and require PROOF that it has been completed. Paperwork as well as pictures. Life is so exciting these days.

  • @oldtwinsna8347

    @oldtwinsna8347

    4 ай бұрын

    Add to that it MUST be serviced by their "approved" companies only or it will not be accepted. Of course, this is because they are getting kickbacks from these places to begin with. Outright fraud.

  • @AidanSkoyles

    @AidanSkoyles

    3 ай бұрын

    get a new insurance company. @@oldtwinsna8347

  • @1012irish1
    @1012irish1 Жыл бұрын

    You are so correct. I moved into my townhome 1983 and the water heater was still there from when it was built I kept it for like 30 years and someone said I’m living on borrowed time so that’s why I replaced it. But it was a great water heater it was built to last

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing that! Another example of the older water heaters lasting a very long time. I wouldn't be surprised if that water heater would have been just fine even until now if you hadn't replaced it.

  • @1012irish1

    @1012irish1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WordofAdviceTV I think you are absolutely correct. In fact the refrigerator and dishwasher that came with the place are still running. Thank you for all the helpful information you give

  • @fengjingbao
    @fengjingbao Жыл бұрын

    I am so glad I bumped into your video so that I don't have to spend 14K dollars for my water heater and boiler for house heating. My system was installed about 18 years ago which is actually still working well. I was baffled as to how could a plumbing company charge over 7K for the replacement job as the equipment they would use will not cost more than 6 to 7K. You are so correct in saying that the "efficiency" gained through replacement will not be worth it. Thank you for the sound advise.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    You're welcome! Yes, if the system is working well and there are no leaks, there is no need to replace it. I'm glad to hear this video came at a good time for you. 👍

  • @libbyd1001
    @libbyd100110 ай бұрын

    I was very young in the early 70s when our water heater "blew out" in the basement. I recall opening the door to the basement one morning and a blast of steamy air hit me. It was like a steam room. We has a small house so I guess the hot water was enough to remain fairly hot despite there being a few inches of water on the floor throughout the basement. Fast forward about 20 years and in the first house I ever bought, my wife and I were only there a few months when the exact same thing happened. So I suppose I am doubly blessed to have been chosen twice for that honor. I knew nothing about home maintenance and repair at that time (obviously), but those experiences forced me to learn a lot and I do maintain and repair all the usual stuff in my old age. Not only for my own family, but friends as well. Videos like yours are greatly appreciated.

  • @macdaddykwm1
    @macdaddykwm1 Жыл бұрын

    The old water heaters lasted a long time because they were glass lined and didn't corrode so much. The manufactures figured out that they could sell more heaters if they left out the lining and let them rust. State Water Heaters is the only company I know of that still has some models that are glass lined.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Not very good for sales if they last too long right? Good to know that State water heaters still make some glass lined models. Thank you for sharing!

  • @mathman0101

    @mathman0101

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WordofAdviceTV or you decide to sell more of the other parts of a water heater and create a strong maintenance schedule. If the reputation grows actually more people will buy them, insurers will recommend them and contractors will fit them. It’s a more longer term business strategy but you create a reputation for being customer focused and excel in your engineering. You can then design more products to sell. If you get a reputation for poor quality water heaters how likely is it you are going to see strong sales? Not much so if state are still glass lining kudos to them.

  • @sydneylaubinger6351

    @sydneylaubinger6351

    Жыл бұрын

    Bradford White does as well.

  • @charlesland4803

    @charlesland4803

    7 ай бұрын

    This is incorrect information. Most water heaters are glass lined today. Lack of maintenance is the reason most fail today. Somewhere along the line people forgot they have to maintenance things if they want them to last.

  • @macdaddykwm1

    @macdaddykwm1

    7 ай бұрын

    They all last 7 to 10 years. My last one failed at the weld seam between the sides and the bottom.. The only one I know if that is glass lined is State Water heaters.

  • @paulhurley9475
    @paulhurley9475 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for all the work you put into your videos. They are fantastic.

  • @steveno7058
    @steveno70589 ай бұрын

    Excellent video!!!!! Those horror stories of water heaters bottoming out is a scare tactic.

  • @michaelmaclachlan2152
    @michaelmaclachlan2152 Жыл бұрын

    As a new HVAC service tech, I really enjoy your videos. I have seen a few leaking water heaters , especially from flushing the tank after 6 years of not flushing it. it's better to just let them go with a annual flush at that point. Also changing the anode rod is a great way to get more life out of the equipment.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad to hear you are liking the videos! Yes, with old sleepers like that, it's best to leave them alone. 😅 When you come out to a 30 year old water heater and they ask you to drain/flush it and test the pressure relief valve... Oh boy. 🤦‍♂️

  • @enzoh7763

    @enzoh7763

    Жыл бұрын

    just sharing my experience as a home owner . buoght this house with a 10 yrs old gas water heater. after settling in , we drain the tank and the sediment water look closer to squid ink . WHEW , took us around 20 minutes of contnous flushing to be very confident that no more resideue is left . been doing that every year, until the water heater is FORCED by AllState insurance to have it replaced . a good working heater is UNNECESSARILY filling the garbage dump , not ecology minded at all , bad for the environment from insurance big wigs decisions. sad goodbye to a gas water heater, euthanize at 28 yrs old,, was hoping to have her till 30 yrs old. .. THIS replacement,, some friends say,, will NEVER last more than 15 yrs , even with annual purging/flushing. just the quality of materials is lower quality . as they say, to keep their business continue,, plan for their product obsolescense. .

  • @garypierce7380

    @garypierce7380

    11 ай бұрын

    This video was super helpful!

  • @waydetheblade
    @waydethebladeАй бұрын

    Bought a house in 2002. Replaced an old early 80's water heater just to be on the safe side. In 2018, mine literally exploded (or imploded depending on how you look at it) and water flooded my basement. At the time, it was an unfinished basement and didn't have much down there except some junk, which I ended up throwing away. Today, it's a fully finished basement, so hopefully that won't happen again. The plummer who replaced it said he's replaced hundreds of water heaters over his 20 year career and had never seen one blow up like mine. (It was electric, not gas.)

  • @ronkrodel2422
    @ronkrodel2422 Жыл бұрын

    I am a retired plumber. Your videos are fantastic !!!

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Ron! That means a lot coming from a veteran plumber! Have a fantastic weekend good sir!

  • @mathman0101

    @mathman0101

    Жыл бұрын

    They are not just fantastic but Jay has the great capacity to explain even technical details which are critical to his viewers. This means he is not talking down to people his easy going friendly style pits many people at ease. I have many years of engineering and technical plumbing, HVAC/ R and especially electrical knowledge and I have said it before but it bears worth repeating he is As good as the great Craig Migliacio high praise indeed.👏🏾👌🏾

  • @RodSullivanik

    @RodSullivanik

    2 ай бұрын

    My water heater started leaking the bottom pipe a few months ago. the whole water heater started leaking badly and I don't know what caused it

  • @markfournette2483
    @markfournette24837 ай бұрын

    Brilliant video: Great information, clear, and crisply delivered. Many thanks!

  • @natehirsh
    @natehirsh6 ай бұрын

    I always love watching your video. They are so full of knowledge.

  • @historyismetal2187
    @historyismetal2187 Жыл бұрын

    Your channel is amazing. Love this how to content and you do an amazing job. Simple and straight to the point.

  • @kele1264
    @kele1264 Жыл бұрын

    I can't tell you how much I appreciate every single one of your videos, whether they apply to my stuff at the time or not. It's still learning! I've been nervous about my water heater for a while, only because it is 24 years old. It looks "brand new". Even the stickers on it look new. It's a Bradford White, and one sticker says it's equipped with "Hydrojet Total Protection System". It's natural gas fired. I see no signs of rust, or any other physical changes, and it doesn't make any weird noises. Never flushed it, never replaced or cleaned the rod. I take comfort from today's video, relieved that I can tamp down my stress about it, and not pay a fortune to replace a water heater that is working just fine. Thank you for your videos, your expertise, very clear demonstrations, pictures, and those sound files you include sometimes (like the ac fan motor video). And your sense of humor. I hope you and your family are doing wonderfully in Hawaii. Best wishes to all of you. Looking forward to your next video, and appreciating your past videos.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    That's awesome! If your water heater is still looking brand new then you must have one from the half-century series. 😉 I wouldn't be surprised if it gets to 40 years before giving you any trouble. It's amazing how some of the oldest water heaters I've seen are actually the ones that never had the anode rod replaced or have been drained or flushed. You're welcome! I am happy to know that my videos have been helpful for you! Thank you for the positive and pleasant comment! Hawaii has been treating us wonderfully and I trust your side of the world has been good to you too. May God abundantly bless you and yours!!

  • @kele1264

    @kele1264

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WordofAdviceTV Half-century series 😂🤣😂

  • @mathman0101

    @mathman0101

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WordofAdviceTV the chemical composition in the water is the biggest factor in corrosion and shorter lives for some heaters than others in my view. Being born and lived in the UK for 40 years our boilers and water heater systems tended to corrode more or less depending on the area or region where water was fed from in areas of hard water or limescale (calcium carbonate) more servicing and annual maintenance are needed for water heaters and tankless boilers or water filled radiators. I moved to the USA 14 years ago. Just replaced an anode rod for an old neighbor of mine the entire 5ft of rod was gone and caked in limescale deposits. Replaced it with a new anode and given the entire system had not been touched serviced or drained other parts are starting to go including the PRV which leaked a little after the replacement would you know it and the metal head PVC to copper transition fitting started to leak. In my view it’s a bit of a lottery depending on your regions water hardness. If you going to service it do it when it’s first installed and annually thereafter. With n older water heater it’s a lottery whether doing work on it is going to cause more problems than worth the issue. Not surprising the old pros often tell people to leave it well alone.

  • @larrylass4268
    @larrylass42682 ай бұрын

    Thanks. I have a 30 year old propane water heater. No leaks and working. Considered replacing but will wait until I see a leak.

  • @irinabenskaya5499
    @irinabenskaya549910 ай бұрын

    Thanks for honesty and sharing your knowledge! Home owner need more professionals like you who do the job not to rip people especially women and elderly. Blessed your soul! Irina

  • @DBR00
    @DBR005 ай бұрын

    You seem like the nicest guy. Thank you for making such an informative video.

  • @TappPlumbing
    @TappPlumbing Жыл бұрын

    Great content! We have been called to a flooded basement from a leaking heater 4 times I can remember off hand. I have been doing this more than 35 years though. We always tell our clients if you are sure it is actually the tank leaking , DO NOT WAIT to replace it. You did an outstanding job covering the most relevant information. Loved the video!

  • @stevenshreckengost6462
    @stevenshreckengost6462 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome knowledgeable videos, I have drained my hot water tank, flushed it a little, took a good hour, but yet my tank while heating, gas; still is popping, drives me crazy, it's about 7 yrs old, and in a dry area. Crazy, no heating issues or pressure all is well except popping while heating. This is the 1st draining of this tank.

  • @victormartiny6419
    @victormartiny6419 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks again Jay! Your videos are addicting!

  • @carleneatkinson4225
    @carleneatkinson42254 ай бұрын

    I am glad to come across a video that answered my problem. My Rheem hot water tank which I purchased in 2020 is currently leaking at the bottom, I have a plumber coming this Friday to look at it. Also it’s leaking I still need to leave it on because I need to use hot water. So happy you spoke on years of rust corrosion that would cause the bottom to fall apart and cause a flood, Now I can go to sleep. A yes you’re right about studying history I told my daughter that same thing and she didn’t listen to me😀

  • @maryjohnston2109
    @maryjohnston2109 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for this excellent video delivered in a very professional way. I will sleep easier tonight and call my plumber in the morning about the small amount of water under my 22 year old Ruud water heater. Ten years ago I was out of town for several weeks in December. When I returned to my cool home it smelled very musty like a summer basement. The water was up to an inch or so deep in spots of the uneven floor. I turned the water to the tank off and In the morning called the plumber. He said the culprit was a defective valve near the top of the tank, which he replaced. So my home wasn't flooded, but there was quite a bit of water down there. Thanks again for your lesson.

  • @patrickphippspa584
    @patrickphippspa584 Жыл бұрын

    Missed you buddy! Hope you and the family are very well. You look GREAT! Hope you're healthy, happy and comfortable! Great seeing you again!

  • @lowlifegarage
    @lowlifegarage Жыл бұрын

    Great video. We just bought a house with a 12 year old electric hot water heater on our well. I was planning on replacing it because i didnt know how long it would last. It works just fine

  • @clearvisionapps4563
    @clearvisionapps4563 Жыл бұрын

    Wonderful and informative video! Thank you!!

  • @bapasrcadventures3619
    @bapasrcadventures3619 Жыл бұрын

    Well I was one of the special people that had a small flood. Luckily my daughter was home and saw water at the bottom of the stairs. She called me at work and I told her how to turn off the water and the water heater and drain it. It didn’t gush out but it was leaking pretty fast. It did do damage to bottom of some walls and some carpet. There was a sump pump about 12 inches away but basement floor was made so the water ran to the finished part of basement! Good job cement man! Lol

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh yikes! You are the first flood story! Sorry to hear about the damages and thank you much for sharing your experience with a leaking water heater. I should have mentioned in the video that one good tip is to make sure that everyone in the house knows where the main water shut off is.

  • @diy_eric

    @diy_eric

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi, another chosen one here. I used to live in a townhome built on a slab so the hot water tank was on the ground floor in a closet. I had just gotten home a little early from work and I sat down on the couch and right away heard bam! I rushed into the room where the tank was located and just saw the water gushing everywhere. The drain valve had completely come off like a champagne cork and the water was gushing out. Luckily, the main shut off was right next to the tank. Upon further inspection, I realized the drain valve popped off because the nylon threads on the valve had been screwed into metal threads causing a chemical reaction / mineral buildup on the nylon thread making them completely smooth like a cork! In that 30 seconds I did get a lot of water but can you imagine if I hadn't been home and it did that for a few more hours!

  • @rzh3443
    @rzh3443 Жыл бұрын

    Thumbs up ! Our municipal water pressure is over 80psi. I installed a Pressure Reducing Valve (PRV) years ago to keep pressure at 50psi which reduces strain on piping, tank and water- using appliances. Our washing machine and dishwasher have lasted well past the usual lifespans. I also installed an expansion tank on the cold water inlet to the HW heater. That absorbs the pressure back flow as water heats with no faucet open ( the PRV creates a closed system so pressure can't dissipate back to water service main). I believe , but cannot prove, that reduced pressure alleviates some of the expansion/contraction of the tank interior. Also, best to place HW heater on a pan which connects to a drain. That way if it does leak you don't send water everywhere.and you have time to react., Also you will know that it is not another source of water leakage. If you have a draft induced blower, be sure condensate drain port is connected to a drain as condensate getting in the blower will kill the motor. I never flush the tank but I do drain 5-10 gallons from tank every few months and particularly after the Town flushes the water mains ( twice a year here ).

  • @gaypreator8547
    @gaypreator8547 Жыл бұрын

    Well I’ve had three leak = replace. No flooding but I learned to check and check.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Yikes! Sorry to hear that. I can only agree, it's definitely a good idea to occasionally check the water heater and see if there is any water on the floor around it.

  • @anxiousbeachbums
    @anxiousbeachbums9 ай бұрын

    Genuinely useful video. Thanks.

  • @EricPark971
    @EricPark971Ай бұрын

    Remarkably decent delivery of information. Lack of industry experience???😅😅😅😅😅 One of nicest videos on the topic.

  • @tatiana6248
    @tatiana62485 ай бұрын

    You are so knowledgeable! Thank you so much!

  • @amiharris8580
    @amiharris85809 ай бұрын

    9/1/2023 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I am taking notes in Replacing/installing a direct vent side loop Water tank-heater. Thank you for sharing your expertise Regarding when to replace a water heater/tank.

  • @TheFilthy13
    @TheFilthy132 ай бұрын

    Again, thank you so much for your explanation and your experience you have in your field. Your video really helped me out again and lifted a big weight off my mind and my pocket book. Thanks again and keep the great videos coming.

  • @raheemal-ugaily2529
    @raheemal-ugaily2529 Жыл бұрын

    Your video is beneficial and funny at the same time, thank you.

  • @AlfaKenyBody
    @AlfaKenyBody10 ай бұрын

    Thanks to your attitude (always truthfull) you have forged a strong brand. If you have a company covering the entire USA, you can rest assured you will have loyal and happy customers.

  • @dm7097
    @dm7097 Жыл бұрын

    I’m going on 25 years on my heater. 3 people in the house and had had regular annual maintenance (done my me). I expect probably another 5 years (or more). Btw it’s an AO Smith tank.

  • @reitusaf
    @reitusaf3 ай бұрын

    Found your video after my expansion tank on top got a hole and sprayed water all over. 23 year old system... Luckily was home and caught it before too much water flooding happened.

  • @shanew7361
    @shanew7361 Жыл бұрын

    Great video and very true 👍 my gas forced water heater is 19 years old.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! May your water heater last you another 19 years, problem free!

  • @Eddy63
    @Eddy63 Жыл бұрын

    Good little vid Jay and your right about living in the past , you can't move forward 🤣😂😅 Thx for sharing and Aloha from across the creek ...

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Haha Eddy you are an expert in adding on to jokes. I love it! 😂 I appreciate the greetings and that you always stop by to check out the new videos. Aloha from the sunny state of Hawaii my friend!! May your weekend be a marvelous one!

  • @Brick1978
    @Brick197811 ай бұрын

    Very good information, thank you !

  • @geneballay9590
    @geneballay95906 ай бұрын

    verywell done. thank you for sharing

  • @OmarTravelAdventures
    @OmarTravelAdventures3 ай бұрын

    I love the advice at end. Very cool video, very thoughtful and interesting to hear about water heaters.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you! Glad you enjoyed the video!

  • @sweetrocks85
    @sweetrocks8511 ай бұрын

    Very good, honest and objective video! Sadly, almost all plumbing contractors use fear and deception, and say you must relace it in 8 to 12 years. Of course! They want to sell you a new water heater & installation! The 1st gas water heater in my house, a Rheem, lasted 25 years, with NO maintenence whatsoever. Then just a small leak from the tank. Even with high iron & calcium water. Going on 23 years on my 2nd one, an AO Smith. Started power flushing 15 to 20 gals out once a yr, about 5 yrs ago. Only complaint is the very poor spickets, drain valves used in water heaters. If you have a water heater 20+ yrs old, replace it only if you have to! Most made now are junk in comparison to the old.

  • @ShotgunWizard
    @ShotgunWizard Жыл бұрын

    Great video, thanks! I knew nothing about water heater and started to think I had to change mine soon (roughly 10y old), turns out I won’t need to

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    You're welcome! I love to hear that this video already saved a water heater life! 😄

  • @jasonligo895
    @jasonligo895 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. Loved the ending.

  • @seshachary5580
    @seshachary55804 ай бұрын

    VERY EDUCATIVE THANK YOU

  • @robalexander7348
    @robalexander7348 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, a nice video, I live in NSW Australia and i built my new home in October 1980 a DUX HWS was installed then, which then sprung a leak Oct 1998 after 18 yrs service, i then had a new RHEEM HWS installed which then started to leak in Febuary this year (2022) which did last 24 yrs, now i have a DUX replacement so lets see how long this one lasts. All these HWS are/were 250 litres (60 Gall) have a single bottom element,and water temp is set at 60 Deg, also our water supply here is Soft water which could also help for longer tank life 👍

  • @CoolValleyHVACR
    @CoolValleyHVACR Жыл бұрын

    Lol this guy with the dad jokes

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol, as some would say: came for the water heater, stayed for the dad jokes. 😂

  • @jciamretired9767
    @jciamretired9767 Жыл бұрын

    great video with good explanation :)

  • @harrydickson4575
    @harrydickson4575 Жыл бұрын

    Great advice 👍👍👍 lol on the end

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Harry! Haha glad you liked the jokes! 😄 I know your every weekend is amazing anyway but may this one be extra awesome for you my friend!! By the way, I was impressed to see you promoting freon theft. 😂😂 Welcome back to KZread!!

  • @salvadorayala8266
    @salvadorayala8266 Жыл бұрын

    Excelente like always. Muchas gracias.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Gracias Salvador! Glad you liked the video!

  • @swamp1foxva518
    @swamp1foxva518 Жыл бұрын

    Dude that was as close to perfect as you can get.. Brav0👏

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol, thank you man! Glad you thought the video was good!

  • @OmarTravelAdventures

    @OmarTravelAdventures

    3 ай бұрын

    I agree.

  • @twisterdude100
    @twisterdude100 Жыл бұрын

    man you are awesome! you have helped me solve a bunch of ac and heat problems. i recomend your channel to everyone! my water heater is at least 14 years old (gas) and going strong!

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! I'm glad to hear that the channel has been helpful for you and I appreciate you recommending it to everyone! May your water heater last you another 14 years easy!

  • @cmgray74
    @cmgray74Ай бұрын

    My situation is one of those older Water Heaters. Back when I was 6 years old I helped my father install a new Montgomery Wards Glass Packed Hot water heater. From memory it was just prior to Christmas. My mom and Dad had just purchased their first home and I was a only child at that point. Today my boy lives in the place going to college. The date of Manufacturer on the Water heater is 10-1-1981. After 43 years of use, no problems ever with the water heater, the basement flooded with 3 feet of water over Easter weekend (also a first flood or water in basement we ever experienced) due to root infected Sewer line. For current reasons unknown today I can not light the pilot. No flame what-so-ever, so my guess is something in the gas valve was affected or a clog in the pilot orifice. There is still a remote chance things are still wet causing us grief. After talking to a couple DIY/professionals they are all telling me basically what you mentioned. I should replace based on age alone. The unit has never given me or my family grief in 43 years with little to no maintenance. Cosmetically it look decent still as well. Your video gave me a sanity check! Thanks for the great video!

  • @sophmaster200
    @sophmaster200 Жыл бұрын

    I have some rental properties and have replaced several water heaters after only a few years due to thermal couplers. I’ve stopped buying from the big box stores and haven’t had problems since.

  • @robertorimbao9997
    @robertorimbao999711 ай бұрын

    By the way I'm a huge fan. I work at apartments complex and we have to replace water heater very often. Old complex.

  • @geoffreyhall7843
    @geoffreyhall78434 ай бұрын

    very interesting comment about glass lined water heaters. We had a furnace (Trane) and water heater (40 gal, gas) installed in 2091. We're on well water with sediment filter and softener. Water heater working fine but I will be putting in a tankless heater this year. The heater that is still plugging away is a State Water Heater. Connection to longevity....possibly! Thanx for your content.

  • @1akmason
    @1akmason4 ай бұрын

    My gas's water heater is 30 years old, every 2 years I drain it and have replaced the analog rod once and it's still going strong. I did swap out the drain valve from the half-inch drain it came with to a three-quarter inch ball valve makes draining ridiculously easy

  • @Steve-iq5yw
    @Steve-iq5yw5 ай бұрын

    Thanks for this informative video and quelling our fears. I have a 40 year old Ruud electric water heater that is still working. I have never drained the unit or replaced the anode. I am assuming that if it ever starts to leak it will start off as a trickle at which time i wil start looking for a new water heater,but that hasnt happened yet.

  • @omegalgo297
    @omegalgo2978 ай бұрын

    Gracias brother for your help an honesty ❤🎉🎉🎉

  • @Dutchy-1168
    @Dutchy-11687 ай бұрын

    Great advice ‼️

  • @waterheatersnow97
    @waterheatersnow97Ай бұрын

    Just a thought, if there is 2 inches of sediment in a heater the exhaust pipe can get 2-4 times hotter than normal as the heat transfer is not working properly and a majority of burnt gas heat is going through the chimney rather than heating water. The last set of claims in the video are not accurate. The rest I totally agree with. Good job.

  • @AngelPerez-yy7eb
    @AngelPerez-yy7eb Жыл бұрын

    Love this videos , thanks J

  • @davidhuether7605
    @davidhuether76054 ай бұрын

    Good video....Thank you. Here in Texas the hot water tanks are in the attic. Why they aren't in the garage, I have no idea. Stupidest thing in my mind. Ours are 16 years old and I have flushed them regularly but the thought of a major leak in the second story ceiling makes us crazy. Replacing the originals (2) that have been trouble free except for a 1 new pressure releif valve replacement. Makes me think we could wait, but the thought of an issue at this stage has us replacing them.

  • @mossmiller

    @mossmiller

    3 ай бұрын

    Just replaced my 10-year-old AO Smith tank here in Hutto yesterday. Stopped heating the water and was worried about having a leak in my attic. Rust was prevalent along the top, with rust trails going down the sides. They replaced the tank with another AO Smith, and added a TACO shutoff valve tied to a water sensor on the drip pan. The old tank was loaded with rust and sediment. If yours were 16 years old, you were right to consider replacement with this attic situation. A friend of mine had a 15 year old tank in upstate NY in a second floor condo. It let go and flooded his condo, ruining the parquet floors. It also flooded the first floor condo, doing another 60k in damage. Luckily, the estate of the owner had insurance and he was not held liable. And just the year before this, he was living in a house in Yonkers, NY where another unit let go and flooded the basement. This was less critical as we dried up the family room for the new owner, who was gutting the room for renovation anyway. But the fear of these back to back blowouts had me worried about my Texas situation.

  • @dionysuspapadopolous4395
    @dionysuspapadopolous4395 Жыл бұрын

    Jay, I am a long time viewer and always enjoy your videos. A few years ago my neighbor's hot water heater failed and flooded their basement. On a positive note your video concerning three majo6

  • @dionysuspapadopolous4395

    @dionysuspapadopolous4395

    Жыл бұрын

    Whoops, I was quick on the trigger to send my compliments about yo

  • @jamesdavison6394
    @jamesdavison63942 ай бұрын

    Love the Last Advice as Best ! LoL

  • @rojuan7111
    @rojuan7111 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your videos my friend and yes you Allright my heater is about 20 years old and stills work happy Thanksgiving from Houston Texas

  • @SGorath
    @SGorath Жыл бұрын

    Nice to see you again. Would you review water heater brands? Thanks

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you! That's a great video idea, I will add it to the list!

  • @SGorath

    @SGorath

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WordofAdviceTV thank you stud muffin

  • @eugene9661
    @eugene9661Ай бұрын

    In the last 40 years, I have owned several homes with water heaters of > 30 years. None of them had ever been maintained. None of them had any problems. They are a lot more durable than vendors mislead us.

  • @billbradley2480
    @billbradley2480 Жыл бұрын

    Yrs ago I bought a old trailer house. The water heater started leaking. I had a handy man friend replace it. He said it was 40 years old. He was amazed.

  • @dankelley9361
    @dankelley9361 Жыл бұрын

    Jay, great advice as always😁! I think it’s just an old wives tale to replace your water heater every ten years, told by plumbers to put the fear of God in you!

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Dan! I can only agree with you my friend! The average lifespan is usually brought up by people who are trying to sell a new water heater. 😄

  • @John-dp3ln
    @John-dp3ln11 ай бұрын

    Three wear components on water heaters, anode, dip tube, electric elements (bottom usually). Routine maintenance, it will last a long time. Anode, use aluminum for well water and magnesium for city water. Dip tubes fall apart rot off at top. If they do, your hot water supply will greatly reduce due to mixing hot and cold at top of the tank. Mine is 20 years old, replaced anode and dip tube at 17 years old. Both had failed. Recommend at least every 10 yrs.

  • @jamesrecknor6752
    @jamesrecknor67525 ай бұрын

    My business is replacing water heaters. In my city the water is hard and the pressure is fairly high, typical life of a gas water heater is 12-14 years. Pressure regulators and frequent flushing are needed here. Some of the older tanks, from the 70s and 80s, would last 18-22 years. Never encountered a ruptured tank, only pin holes. Have seen a few tanks pin hole in only 7, 8 years.

  • @johnnycroat
    @johnnycroat Жыл бұрын

    great information

  • @phoenixlai9423
    @phoenixlai94233 ай бұрын

    Thanks for being honest. Most tech wants to replace it because it is easy to do and high pay.

  • @virgil3241
    @virgil3241 Жыл бұрын

    Ive had them last 20 years, and Ive replaced them when one got a small leak, and one had a bulge. Its just if you maintain them will make them last. twice a year flush, and check that anode rod every year or two. One I had to replace after I sold the house, and it started leaking 2 weeks after closing. Which sucked for me, but not the new owners. But the ones that leaked, were also very old.

  • @crisc9280
    @crisc92803 ай бұрын

    Years ago my gas WH went on me because it was leaking water rapidly but not gushing. Ever since though before I go on vacation I turn the gas right down and shut off the main to the house. Something that should always be exercised anyway when not at home for an extended period of time.

  • @JohnDoe-jt9oq
    @JohnDoe-jt9oq Жыл бұрын

    I'm an HVAC tech and 2 weeks after I told one of our office ladies that she should replace her 20 year old tank it bottomed out and destroyed her basement floor. I've only seen it one other time in a second floor condominum, sad story... But I quote old tanks all the time and I've had customers who have told me it happened to them before. I have no idea how long peoples tanks could last I just know I don't want to be the last guy there who didn't tell them it was old and they should consider a replacement.

  • @claytonfite3197
    @claytonfite3197 Жыл бұрын

    lol Jay, I always thought History was cool as it's a tool. Good one and another awesome video. How about dissecting a tankless water heater, gas, and electric? 😁

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol, I usually don't badmouth history but couldn't resist this time as it was a pretty good dad joke. 😇😄 Thank you! And that's a great video idea! I will see if I can get my hands on some old water heaters that I can cut open. 👍👍

  • @stephaniecampbell2682
    @stephaniecampbell26826 ай бұрын

    Great video I have a Rheem water heater, works great! But history is important, you have to look back at where you have been to know where you are going. 😊

  • @rustyrobinson8027
    @rustyrobinson8027 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    You're welcome! 🙂

  • @herbbot8241
    @herbbot82412 ай бұрын

    I have a 9 year old water heater never performed any maintenance like flushing it etc, and I won't start either .gonna keep an eye on it for any small leaks

  • @doctube2020
    @doctube20207 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the straightforward, no bs presentation. Cheers 🍻

  • @BeGood2DoGood
    @BeGood2DoGood Жыл бұрын

    Nice pun at the end. History degree has no future. LOL.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Haha I'm glad to know there are people who enjoyed the joke. 😄

  • @Saint696Anger
    @Saint696Anger7 ай бұрын

    Oh look at that, an honest guy. Rare 🎉

  • @sylviagm
    @sylviagm7 ай бұрын

    Awesome, thanks! My water heater is 10 years old and I'm learning now I should have done maintenance.🙄 Is not heating now so I guess I'll drain it and replace the heating elements and anode rod and hopefully can get 10 more years. Wondering what are your thoughts on tankless water heaters for when I have to replace the whole unit.

  • @scottwebber652
    @scottwebber652 Жыл бұрын

    Comforting info ! Haven’t been able to flush for years due to the drain valve leaking when I open it. Kinda paranoid as ittl b a long job at some point doing the drainage. I have it in main floor not basement

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad I could shine some light on this topic for you! And I totally understand! Drain valves tend to leak once disturbed. If you will feel up to the task later on, you could drain it and replace the drain valve. They are pretty easy to replace. 👍

  • @jbrown7277
    @jbrown7277 Жыл бұрын

    Just replaced mine 3 days ago, Electric lasted 14yrs.It sprung a leak,Luckily it had a drip pan that funneled to French drain.

  • @WordofAdviceTV

    @WordofAdviceTV

    Жыл бұрын

    Sorry to hear about the water heater! May your new one last you twice as long at the very least!

  • @DarkOblivion4327
    @DarkOblivion43273 ай бұрын

    Love the video but it feels like I’ve been struck by lightning based on your confidence that hot water heatings almost never start gushing water. I’ve lived in 2 apartments with older water heaters, maybe 25 years old, which broke and started flooding. One was a college apartment and we just heard the water running from another room and checked on it with an inch of water on the floor. Not quite sure why it was leaking but I just shut off the water til maintenance showed up and replaced it. The other time in another apartment, heard gushing water from the water heater and found a large indent in the side of the thing maybe a foot across, and had to do the same thing, although I caught it earlier than the previous time so there was less water

  • @StuffStudier
    @StuffStudier6 ай бұрын

    I have a 25 year old richmond water heater with no issues. It has no leaks, doesn’t oftenly run out of hot water, no crackling or popping, no smelly water, anone rod was never touched, never flushed it once, burns clean, heats up water fast. They really don’t make them like they used to.

  • @CraigKell
    @CraigKell Жыл бұрын

    Good dad jokes at the end, lol 😂

  • @DavidDesentz-yc4hi
    @DavidDesentz-yc4hi2 күн бұрын

    I got my house 5 years ago and was told my tank would need replacement soon it was already 8 years old...well that time came about a week ago and I became a chosen one as you called it lol..I cut the gas,water,and tank off and empty what was left in tank because it wasn't bad flood but it got about a 30sq foot area of basement so I took up the tiles that was floating lol and dried it all out and replaced it I'm pretty sure it was a rusted hole on the bottom because once I empty it I didn't have anymore water coming from anywhere

  • @AmericanCheeselouise
    @AmericanCheeselouise2 күн бұрын

    The water heater exploded at my last apartment and flooded it. Heard a bang and rush and water was shooting out of the spigot - part of it is my fault because I didn't know how to turn the water off to it, but yeah... it didn't look old and there were no problems with it before.

  • @micromanly
    @micromanly7 ай бұрын

    We were looking to do a new floor in house. Water heater is electric and installed in bedroom closet with no pan. Looking at tank found out it is original tank from when house was built. It is 52 years old and doing fine. Never a problem. Had upper element replaced 25 years ago as it went out. Does not have anode rod to change. Am going to put in a new one when we do new flooring in house. Must have been lucky to have no major issues with it.

  • @EvilArco
    @EvilArco Жыл бұрын

    Ours broke out the bottom while I still lived with my parents going to college. I was playing DOTA, remember the character I was too. All I heard was screaming coming from down stairs yelling for my help. I was put on wet shop vac duty while my dad rushed to a 24 hour rental to get another floor wet vac. Floor survived for the most part, but I almost missed all my classes the next day when we had to put in the new one. My dad probably didn't know about the "college thing" I went to to but I helped replace it the next day. Bad time. Not letting that happen again.

  • @StuffStudier
    @StuffStudier5 ай бұрын

    The sediment thing of how you need to heat the sediment first isnt a bit deal too, as the hot exhaust gasses go through a pipe that makes the pipe hot, and the pipe heats the water too.

  • @jameseagle8242
    @jameseagle82428 ай бұрын

    My home was built nearly 15years ago and still has the original water heater. 5 years ago I learned I was supposed to flush it for sediment, but since I never had, i figured it was too late. I have replaced the thing that lights the gas and that was easy. I have never tested the pressure valve…can I still test it? My biggest concern is it’ll blow up. Great video! Thanks!

  • @frankward8003
    @frankward8003 Жыл бұрын

    My gas water heater is over 16 years old...but I have been thinking about this topic lately...thinking I should replace it before it starts leaking