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Posted by J on October 17, 2007, 4:52 pm
By 'lower tap' do you mean 'drain valve'?
I like the idea of shooting pressured water in there to possibly break the
scale up. I'm wondering if the internal lining is in any way fragile where
I could do damage buy sending in high pressured water? I understand the
tank is steel but has a glass liner to keep rust out of the water. I guess
I don't want to damage this liner.
>>I have an electric water heater that is just over 5 yrs old. I found the
>>scale had built up high enough to bury the lower heating element. (Yes, I
>>now know about cleaning it out on a regular basis.) This caused the
>>heating element to burn out. So I spent some hours cleaning as much of
>>the scale out via the hole for the heating element, and put in a new
>>element. It's heating water fine but I know it's just a matter of time
>>before I burn the element out again. This is a Kenmore Power Miser 9 that
>>has a 9yr tank and parts warranty, so I expect the hardware has some life
>>left in it if I could only clean all the scale out. Any ideas on how I
>>can clean it out?
>>
>> Thanks!
> I dragged mine outside last spring and removed the lower tap as well as
> both elements. I used a garden hose and a pressure washer tip in various
> holes until things seemed to be clean inside. By tipping the heater with
> the tap edge down I was able to ensure I got the scale out. Mine were
> loose particles, not sure if you mean that in your case they are adhered
> to the sides of the cavity?
>
> You > could also drain or partially drain the tank periodically to remove
> some of the scale if it has accumulated in the bottom. My problem with
> this was that small bits of scale would sometimes get into the tap valve,
> so when I turned off the drain tap it sometimes leaked.
> When we had a softener, we added small amounts of acid to our tank monthly
> to help dissolve scale. If you're not going to flush it regularly, this
> is probably your best bet.
>
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