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Cscpl2001's avatar
Cscpl2001
Explorer
Apr 19, 2020

No Hot water

New to Rving... did the whole winterizing. I flushed all the antifreeze from the lines.. now I'm not getting any hot water.. it's a 2019 keystone 22rbs with both electric and gas water heater. Checked all my valves.. all water is flowing.. just not hot.. gas ignites and heats up..any assistance is appreciated
  • If you drain using the pressure relief valve frequently, and your water isn't too hard, you should be fine. The ones to not touch are the ones that haven't been touched on 5 or 10 years. Those are guaranteed to leak.
  • Cscpl2001 wrote:
    New to Rving... did the whole winterizing. I flushed all the antifreeze from the lines.. now I'm not getting any hot water.. it's a 2019 keystone 22rbs with both electric and gas water heater. Checked all my valves.. all water is flowing.. just not hot.. gas ignites and heats up..any assistance is appreciated
    One thing you might already know is make sure water is in the water heater tank before you turn on the heat. Sometimes the electric switch is turned on and people forget. Even after they drain the tank.

    Is it possible you drained the tank and just havnt given it time to fill back up?

    Or maybe the 1-way valve exiting the water heater is stuck closed?
  • wa8yxm's avatar
    wa8yxm
    Explorer III
    wopachop wrote:
    He also notices the hose i have running from the water heater. Says with all his years experience he tells people to never drain the water heater and never touch the pressure relief.


    A professional plumber has an interest in selling you a new water heater... Just so you know.. I have no such interest.

    in 15 years I have replaced the TPR valve one time, and that is because I replaced the tank and it came with a brand new TPR valve. the old one still works as designed but since I had the new one...

    Kind of like when I did the front brakes. We had the wheels of and the brake calipers off the rotors so I figured replace the pads and save the labor charge.
  • wa8yxm wrote:
    A professional plumber has an interest in selling you a new water heater... Just so you know.. I have no such interest.
    Im the plumber though. Ive done maybe 10 water heaters over the years. Trying to give you guys behind the scenes construction talk.

    The last time it came up with the slab leak owner finally sealed the deal for me. I wont ever recommend draining a water heater to home owners anymore.

    Unless it was brand new. If i one day buy a brand new water heater then hell yes im draining that sucker.
  • 1. TPR valves are meant to be opened and closed manually. Both Atwood and Suburban will state to do this to troubleshoot certain problems.
    2. Atwood Water Heaters have a so called TPR seepage problem. This is because Atwoods require an Air Gap and when the Gap is gone the TPR valve will seep. Once the Air Gap is restored the TPR will not seep again. Unqualified RV techs and DIY's replace the TPR when it is not needed due to this type issue.
    3. ALWAYS drain the RV Water heater 3 or 4 times a year. Depending on the water Quality, Mineral build up can happen very quickly.
    4. Residential Water Heaters. FOLLOW THE WATER HEATER MAKER INSTRUCTIONS. Some have built in agitators that do not allow the corrosive mineral build up to corrode the tank. Others(cheaper models) will state to drain 1 to 2 times a year. This also depends on your local water quality.
    5. When you have a LACK of hot water, the FIRST thing you do after you have allowed the WH to heat up is to POP the TPR valve. IF HOT water comes out then you have a tank full and have HOT water. IF no water comes out there is NO WATER in the tank. Find the reason(Bypass valve or such). Doug

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