Electric water heater manufacturing element quality going bad?

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Ballvalve

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I have some water heaters with heavy useage. The well water quality is good by tests and within norms.

I have used several brands of elements, usually 3500 and 4500 watt, of all density types. I used to get about 2 or 3 years + from an element. Lately, I am changing elements like batteries in a kids toy.

Heaters are drained regularly and I recently vacuumed out the calcium debri in the bottom of one. Installed a Camco mfg. lime life ripple super low watt density element. Blew out at one of the sharp bends in 2 months. Looks like the metal was stretched too thin there. Almost no calcium-lime build up on the element. Quiet in operation. Another went zonkers and blew out in a few areas and bent itself up into a pretzel.

NO dry firing. A mediuim density fold back element also blew in 6 months.

Do anode rods protect the heating element as well as the tank? Any ideas?
 

Redwood

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I don't know what to tell you. I have used many of the Camco Lime Life elements without problems like you are facing. I would say given the number of failures you have had the problem is unique to you.
 

Ballvalve

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Another Camco "lifetime" element blew its nichrome wire through the casing within 3 months. Hardly any lime on the element. Maybe Camco moved its MFG. to china or bangladesh.

Customer NO-service from Camco, and the store too. Guess I'll go back to Graingers who send out new ones with a single phone call.
 

Redwood

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I haven't seen it myself...
I use quite a few of them I carry them on my truck for use.

I'd suspect something else is causing your problem...
 

Jadnashua

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Some things I'd check:
- Make sure that the power inlet wires are tight and the proper gauge.
- Make sure you have a good ground lead
- See if you have an a/c potential between the pipes and the ground wire
- at the panel, see if you have a potential between the ground and the neutral
- if your meter has a peak hold or an 'instantaneous' reading, check to see if there are any excessive peaks or dropouts.
- make sure that the leads are tight at the CB
- pull the CB and look to see if there is any evidence of overheating, or poor contacts on both the CB and the bus bar; if old, consider replacing the CB. If the bus bar is burnt, move to another slot, or replace the panel.
 
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