The water heater right of passage

img 2576

I feel like we finally cross a right of passage in home ownership.

Our water heater split open in the top-floor attic, spilling water through the ceiling in the laundry room and generally inciting a frenzy of panic for 24 hours, after which we are many thousands of dollars poorer and now the owners of a new tankless water heater.

I’ve spoke to several neighbors who have had this same thing happen to them over the years, including a neighbor a few doors down just a couple months ago. I thought it wouldn’t happen to me, but what other outcome would there be really? Proactively replace the water heater, just because? BEFORE it fails? Does anyone really do that? The water heater was 9 years old. It felt like we could get a few more years about it. Seemed like it was running strong and steady. They don’t exactly give you many signals that they are about to burst.

In retrospect, it seemed like a gamble, and in gambling the house (water heater) always wins.

Regardless, I think we escaped the worst. The water damage was pretty small (we caught it just as it was starting). A quick trip to Lowes for a shop vac saved us.

In the end, I’m happy with the new unit and even happier I don’t have 40 gallons of water above my living space anymore that might someday come pouring down on me.

Comments

2 responses to “The water heater right of passage”

  1. Oh no! I remember talking about this with you recently and we figured you’d be fine for a while. I’m guessing the previous owners may have never drained the tank, causing sediment to build up and clog the pressure relief valve? So glad this didn’t happen while at the beach, that would have been crazy!

  2. Phil Severson Avatar
    Phil Severson

    Yikes!! Good thing you were home!! Yup about 10 years is the life expectancy now days!

Comments welcome!

Discover more from Get On With It

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading