- Thread starter
- #11
BruceAZ
Songster
It's pretty easy once you know what you are doing 
It's quieter, more energy efficient and more user friendly. I wanted the energy star model with energy coefficient of 0.67 but they don't have it in store. I would have to wait 3 weeks for them to ship it to store or my house. Eh.. 3 weeks with no hot water during the winter ? I got the "one level down" water heater instead 0.65 coefifcient.
I still have to solder a joint to direct the T&P drain line to the outside.. but overall it's up and running.
old vs new -- i have some HVAC aluminum tape lying around so.. why not..
I made some adjustment as well. It will be easy to remove and install a new water heater or anode rod with the compression fitting set up
I got a water heater with a separate anode rod this time around instead of those 2 in 1 nipple type from Bradford White water heaters!. It will cost about $15-$25 for the anode rod instead of $45-$55 for those segmented anode rods.
total cost (tax included) around $780 vs $1299 Costco's quote (cheapest around)

It's quieter, more energy efficient and more user friendly. I wanted the energy star model with energy coefficient of 0.67 but they don't have it in store. I would have to wait 3 weeks for them to ship it to store or my house. Eh.. 3 weeks with no hot water during the winter ? I got the "one level down" water heater instead 0.65 coefifcient.
I still have to solder a joint to direct the T&P drain line to the outside.. but overall it's up and running.
old vs new -- i have some HVAC aluminum tape lying around so.. why not..
I made some adjustment as well. It will be easy to remove and install a new water heater or anode rod with the compression fitting set up

total cost (tax included) around $780 vs $1299 Costco's quote (cheapest around)
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