Water Heater Repair, Part 2

This post is where I expand on step 1 from my earlier post on how to fix a water heater.

You need a multimeter. You must be able to measure resistance somehow. I know, it’s futile. Just ignore the bellowing guard.

Here goes:

Check for a failed element

  • Disconnect both wires from the heating element. Measure the resistance across the element (from one screw to the other). It should be a dozen ohms or so.

    picture of a multimeter measuring resistance of a good water heater element

  • Repeat for the other element.
  • If either one is zero or a large number, that element is bad.

    picture of a multimeter measuring resistance of a bad water heater element

Check for a failed connection

  • With the wires still disconnected, measure the resistance between the element and the tank. It should be an open circuit (or a really really large number).

    picture of a multimeter measuring resistance of a good water heater element

  • Repeat for the other screw and then for the other element.
  • If either one is a low number, then something is bad. It’s probably the element.

    picture of a multimeter measuring resistance of a bad water heater element

Check for a failed thermostat

  • Connect everything back together like it was. Do this only if your elements were fine. Then turn on the power and be careful.
  • Now you need to measure voltage. A multimeter will work, or you can use a dedicated AC voltage tester.
  • You must cause the water heater to think it needs to heat water. Turn on the hot water at some faucet, or turn up the thermostat setting very high.
  • Measure the voltage across the two screw terminals of the heating element. You should have 240V (or 120V, whatever you’re wired for).

    picture of a multimeter measuring resistance of a bad water heater element

  • Turn down that thermostat and turn up the other one.
  • Now measure that element’s voltage.
  • If you never get voltage to an element, then the thermostat is bad.
  • Note that the upper thermostat can prevent the lower thermostat from working. If you’re electrically inclined, you can re-wire the lower thermostat to take power directly from the line, rather than through the upper thermostat.

And, in case are wondering if you can tell just by looking if a water heater element is good or bad – yes, you usually can.

Good:

picture of a good water heater element

Bad:

picture of a bad water heater element

Look for things like splits or cracks in the metal:
picture of a crack in a water heater elementpicture of a split in a water heater element

One more post coming soon – how to unscrew the heating element.

But the day of the Lord will come like a thief, in which the heavens will pass away with a roar and the elements will be destroyed with intense heat, and the earth and its works will be burned up.

2 Peter 3:10

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This little article thingy was written by Some Guy sometime around 6:38 am and has been carefully placed in the Projects category.

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