BBranch
New Member
Hello All,
I have been cruising this site for a while and it seems to offer good advice to us novices.
I have a cottage in northern Michigan that is used on mostly weekends from May-October. The current water heater is an electric, 40 gal, Made for Dayton electric of Chicago?, ser# 8915120332, mod# 3E119K, dual element unit. The water heater is drained during winter months. After filling this spring (no power was turned on until after filled) the unit is not heating the water. I hit the reset button above element, the water is slightly warm, I checked the temperature at the bottom release and it too was only warm so I don't think it is the dip tube. Some questions:
1) Am I correct in thinking the unit was manufactured in 1989 by reading the serial number?
2) Because the unit is only used half of the year, would it make sense to expect twice the lifespan?
3)If so, should I replace elements, dip tube, anode rod, etc.... re-build, or just get a new unit?
4) Because of being seasonal, are there any choices I should make differently than if purchasing a unit for a full time residence?
5) I have gotten a quote from a local plumber of approx $500 installed for a Bradford/White 50 gal electric. He said it is high effiency, not sure if he's talking the energy saver, or the true high effiency. Does this price seem reasonable (I'll confirm which model)?. He also quoted $50-$60 to install new toilet and shut off valve.
Thanks for all input,
Bill
I have been cruising this site for a while and it seems to offer good advice to us novices.
I have a cottage in northern Michigan that is used on mostly weekends from May-October. The current water heater is an electric, 40 gal, Made for Dayton electric of Chicago?, ser# 8915120332, mod# 3E119K, dual element unit. The water heater is drained during winter months. After filling this spring (no power was turned on until after filled) the unit is not heating the water. I hit the reset button above element, the water is slightly warm, I checked the temperature at the bottom release and it too was only warm so I don't think it is the dip tube. Some questions:
1) Am I correct in thinking the unit was manufactured in 1989 by reading the serial number?
2) Because the unit is only used half of the year, would it make sense to expect twice the lifespan?
3)If so, should I replace elements, dip tube, anode rod, etc.... re-build, or just get a new unit?
4) Because of being seasonal, are there any choices I should make differently than if purchasing a unit for a full time residence?
5) I have gotten a quote from a local plumber of approx $500 installed for a Bradford/White 50 gal electric. He said it is high effiency, not sure if he's talking the energy saver, or the true high effiency. Does this price seem reasonable (I'll confirm which model)?. He also quoted $50-$60 to install new toilet and shut off valve.
Thanks for all input,
Bill