โJul-28-2016 11:31 AM
โJul-28-2016 12:01 PM
Old-Biscuit wrote:
Anode rod head is soft steel with a steel rod that the magnesium (or aluminum) sacrificial material is formed around
Flat surface on head.......aluminum material on rod
Bump on surface of head....magnesium material on rod
Suburban uses an anode rod because tank is a 'glass-lined steel' tank.
Sometimes it helps trying to 'tighten' a stuck bolt FIRST before trying to unscrew it.
Anode rod is necessary to protect that steel tank from rusting out.
Suburban tanks are not available for replacement....have to replace WHOLE water heater
Drill it then E-Z out it
After removal.....use a 3/4" NPT pipe nipple to chase drain hole threads (clean up/straighten them)
โJul-28-2016 11:59 AM
djsamuel wrote:
After 3 years, the anode in my suburban water heater is about 1/3 gone or so. You're probably better than that with a 1 year old trailer. I'd leave it for now.
โJul-28-2016 11:53 AM
โJul-28-2016 11:50 AM
โJul-28-2016 11:46 AM
Passin Thru wrote:
I have drilled out a lot of bolts. Get a 5/16 EZ out (or larger), some penetrating oil and spray the penetrant on. Wait 24 hrs but keep wetting it down every time you can. You may even take a torch, heat the bolt and spray it with oil. Use a set of step drills, start small and work up to a them hole big enough to drive the EZ out in with a ballpeen. The tricky part is to have a wrench that fits the EZ out as it usually has to be really square to it or it will shear off the EZ out. Carefully put pressure on it and keep adding penetrating oil and waiting. The problem is usually clearance to get the tools in there. Search EZ outs on youtube.
โJul-28-2016 11:39 AM
โJul-28-2016 11:36 AM