11-27-2018, 06:14 PM
My natural gas hot water heater was close to 20 years old and still running strong but I decided to be pro-active and replace it before something happened. It was a good thing because there was a pin hole leak on the back side of the heater and a few drops of water in the catch pan. I replaced it the day before Thanksgiving and had to be creative getting the new one into my attic and the old one out of the attic. A couple of come-a-longs and some rope did the trick.
I have pretty much re-modeled my entire home and beefed up the framing under the water heater before moving it into the attic. The old one was behind an accordian door with a toilet in front of it.
The overflow drain line from the water heater pan was run out the soffit using 1 1/4" PVC....it wasn't done at the time I took the picture of the new one installed.
While I'm at it I'm updating my HVAC system which is also close to 20 years old. It's a Trane 3 1/2 ton 14 seer dual fuel heat pump system (heat pump runs until it reaches 35 degrees then it switches over the natural gas rather than electric heat) and the only thing that has gone wrong with it is a Capacitor for the compressor.
The new gas furnace is 95% high efficiency furnace and the heat pump system is 14 seer. For anyone interested the entire system cost me $2,335 including tax. It's a Concord system which is basically a Lenox and has a 10 year warranty. I'm not a fan of Lenox but a Trane system (American Standard) was nearly $1,500 more. I'm also replacing the R5.6 duct insulation (mechanical code at the time I installed the duct system) with R8 insulation because the vapor barrier broke down sitting in a hot attic close to 20 years.
It's nice not having to hire a contractor to do stuff like this. The water heater passed inspection and I doubt the inspector will even go in the attic to inspect the new HVAC system once he realized I was the home owner. He smiled when he pulled in my drive way to inspect the water heater because I've been dealing with him for close to 20 years doing commercial HVAC. He knows I won't cut corners on my own home but I may ask him to try to find something wrong with my install.
I have pretty much re-modeled my entire home and beefed up the framing under the water heater before moving it into the attic. The old one was behind an accordian door with a toilet in front of it.
The overflow drain line from the water heater pan was run out the soffit using 1 1/4" PVC....it wasn't done at the time I took the picture of the new one installed.
While I'm at it I'm updating my HVAC system which is also close to 20 years old. It's a Trane 3 1/2 ton 14 seer dual fuel heat pump system (heat pump runs until it reaches 35 degrees then it switches over the natural gas rather than electric heat) and the only thing that has gone wrong with it is a Capacitor for the compressor.
The new gas furnace is 95% high efficiency furnace and the heat pump system is 14 seer. For anyone interested the entire system cost me $2,335 including tax. It's a Concord system which is basically a Lenox and has a 10 year warranty. I'm not a fan of Lenox but a Trane system (American Standard) was nearly $1,500 more. I'm also replacing the R5.6 duct insulation (mechanical code at the time I installed the duct system) with R8 insulation because the vapor barrier broke down sitting in a hot attic close to 20 years.
It's nice not having to hire a contractor to do stuff like this. The water heater passed inspection and I doubt the inspector will even go in the attic to inspect the new HVAC system once he realized I was the home owner. He smiled when he pulled in my drive way to inspect the water heater because I've been dealing with him for close to 20 years doing commercial HVAC. He knows I won't cut corners on my own home but I may ask him to try to find something wrong with my install.