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Leak from hot water heater

work2fish
Explorer
Explorer
Hi Folks,

I've been having a great time with my new camper this summer. I especially like that I can just stop anywhere to camp and do this on a whim since everything is packed and ready to go.

I noticed that when I had my hot water heater on, there is a constant dripping of water drops coming from one of the spigots, here:



It only drips when the hot water heater is on. I'm guessing that this is not normal, but the only way to fix it would be to put some sort of plug in that spigot. Can anybody tell me why this might be happening?

Thanks,
Mike
2011 Ford F-350, KR, 6.7L, 4X4, SRW, short bed
2007 Northstar 850SC truck camper
2002 Lund Fisherman 1700 w/ Suzuki DF140
32 REPLIES 32

darsben
Explorer II
Explorer II
Before you replace the leaking valve get some PB BLASTER and after relieving pressure on the tank open the valve using the lever. Spray into the valve opening while opening and closing the lever. Let sit for 24 hours or longer. Pressurize valve and see if the leak has stopped.
I have done this on a hot water heater valve and it worked for me.

See the label of can
Traveling with my best friend my wife!

John_Wayne
Explorer II
Explorer II
What the others have said try and reestablish the air pocket and when you open and close the relief leveler let it snap closed do this a few times.
John & Carol Life members
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old_guy
Explorer
Explorer
could be that you just have some mineral build up in the valve. try to flip open and closed a few times and let the water spray out along with the mineral, if that doesn't work, THEN replace the valve. there is very little maintenance with these valves, normally they will last not for ever but for a long time.

robatthelake
Explorer
Explorer
Just give the handle a quick pull or two . Wear gloves it's scalding hot water. That should clear the built up crud and cure the drip!
Rob & Jean
98 Dutch Star Diesel Pusher ..07 Honda CRV AWD

Reddog1
Explorer II
Explorer II
I question Home Depot will have a replacement. As I recall, the typical home water heater uses 3/4" male pipe threads on the relief valve. I think the RV water heaters use 1/2" Male pipe threads. Be sure to check this, I could be wrong.

Wayne


2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda

Toad: 91 Zuke

work2fish
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks again for the information. I will try to release the pressure/clean the dirt out of the area by the methods described before replacing the part.
2011 Ford F-350, KR, 6.7L, 4X4, SRW, short bed
2007 Northstar 850SC truck camper
2002 Lund Fisherman 1700 w/ Suzuki DF140

Joe417
Explorer
Explorer
You can find them at hardware stores but there are 2 sizes. 1/2 inch and 3/4. Measure the diameter of the thread that screw into the tank to be sure.

I speak from experience, it's a pain to buy adapters to make the wrong one fit, but you can.
Joe and Evelyn

ronniedean1234
Explorer
Explorer
RV'S have a closed system, as the water heats it has to expand somewhere so out the relief valve it goes, you need to establish an air pocket at the top of the water heater for water to expand to, shut water heater off, shut incoming water off, open inside faucet and them open relief valve until water stops draining, shut relief valve then turn water on, then faucet off, the water heater does not draw the hot water off the top therefore leaves an air pocket in place, every once in awhile you need to replenish the air pocket....

As mentioned never put a plug into the p/t valve
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1999 Freightliner Western Hauler CC/300 Cat/Chipped
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ab257
Explorer
Explorer
Sometimes if your water system is pressurized and you turn the heater on, the thermal expansion of the water will overpressurize your system a little and cause this to leak. Just run some hot water out of the inside faucet to lower the pressure back to normal. Or it could be some dirt caught in the seat of the relief valve. When the heater is off and the water in the tank is cold, remove the red dust cover, get a plastic bag to cover the electrical connections, stand clear of the outlet and lift up on the silver lever. This will blow some water out (probably quite forcibly) and might clear the dirt out if that is causing the problem. Or just change the safety valve for one of a similar size and pressure rating.

You never want to plug this or your water heater could explode if the thermostat fails and it overpressurizes. Mythbusters had an interesting episode on what happens if you plug the safety valve on a house water heater and then overheat the water.

I also drain and flush out my tank occasionally (usually when winterizing). It looks like you can do that with the plastic plug in the lower left of the photo.
NE PA
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work2fish
Explorer
Explorer
bka0721 wrote:
Have you tried just opening a hot spigot, like at your sink, after you turn your Hot Water on? This relieves the pressure in the tank from the heating water, which creates many of these temporary leaks, like yours.


I have not tried that, but will do. Thanks.

bka0721 wrote:

Also, do you just turn on your hot water heater when you are going to need it, or do you turn it on at the start of a trip and leave it on during the time you are gone, until you arrive back home?


I usually only turn it on in the AM before or before I need it if I am going to use the shower, wash dishes, etc.
2011 Ford F-350, KR, 6.7L, 4X4, SRW, short bed
2007 Northstar 850SC truck camper
2002 Lund Fisherman 1700 w/ Suzuki DF140

work2fish
Explorer
Explorer
OK, thanks for the quick pointers. Since it appears to be common on all water heaters, I am assuming I can find the part at Home Depot?
2011 Ford F-350, KR, 6.7L, 4X4, SRW, short bed
2007 Northstar 850SC truck camper
2002 Lund Fisherman 1700 w/ Suzuki DF140

bka0721
Explorer II
Explorer II
Have you tried just opening a hot spigot, like at your sink, after you turn your Hot Water on? This relieves the pressure in the tank from the heating water, which creates many of these temporary leaks, like yours.

Also, do you just turn on your hot water heater when you are going to need it, or do you turn it on at the start of a trip and leave it on during the time you are gone, until you arrive back home?

b
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brirene
Explorer
Explorer
What Reddog said.
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Nomad II
Nomad II
And no, don't plug it. It's got threads on it so that it can be ran to a safe place (on a typical WH, it would be a head height and dangerous if it went off). But the threads are not there for a plug. If if can't blow off when things go wrong, you're WH becomes a soft grenade.
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Reddog1
Explorer II
Explorer II
Moved to Tech.

Wayne
Moderator


2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda

Toad: 91 Zuke