Kayteg1 wrote:
OP has aluminium tank that don't use anode.
Yes, but an anode that is a metal being less noble than the aluminum will take up most all the corrosion cause by unlike metals i.e. brass plug and aluminum tank. In essence will eat away at the anode instead of the tank.
Another option is to go to a stainless steel plug which is known to do well with aluminum.
I wonder, are the female threads on those tanks aluminum or is it a pressed in adapter, possibly being steel? If aluminum threads, One needs to be very careful not to over tighten.
Im thinking the plastic plugs are a problem since heat from the water heater starts breaking down the plastic causing it to become brittle.
There are better grades of plastics that can take heat better over time, but you would have to research the correct type of plastic and then have a plug milled on a lathe.
It's amazing how much research on the net will reveal the wrong answer over and over. For example, trying to find the correct type of glass for an oven door, every search reported using tempered glass, but was very wrong as an oven door needs ceramic glass like that on a woodstove.