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Just for the hell of it |
Tap the pin that holds the valve. If it still leaks you can pop it open for a second. Might be some crud in the valve. Then you can lightly tap the pin again if needed. If it still leaks I would consider it done. New valve or new water heater. _____________________________________ Because in the end, you won’t remember the time you spent working in the office or mowing your lawn. Climb that goddamn mountain. Jack Kerouac | |||
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Member |
Yep, like the new one on a boiler which had a pinhole in the brass casting. | |||
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Member |
The threads that the pop off valve screws into are probably eroded from galvanic corrosion. Either that or the water heater is half full of sediment....... 18 years is WAYYYYY past the normal life of a water heater in Florida with our hard water.....just change the darn thing. I love how people throw so much money and time at junk and still have junk when they're done. | |||
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Nosce te ipsum |
When I was an apprentice me and the master spent ages copper piping a wall of pipe, fittings, valves. A maze of lines feeding a whole lot of stuff. Fifty-four solder joints, numerous valves, lots of tight fractional cuts under four or five inches. And . . . A Nibco stop-and-waste had a pinhole in the brass body. I've forever emulated his reaction and response. "That happens". Drain the system and replace it. Eighteen years does not sound too old for a water heater. I've seen them running fine at 40+. There is no rhyme or reason. Maybe it has to do with local soil conditions, electrical current in the water lines? Good job, Tommy, helping out a friend. I spend more time doing stuff for free than actually working. Keeps my B/P in check. | |||
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