flygt4 wrote:nope its definately easy. am a sparky and we do them all the time.
when the element blows it normally pops the fuse and most plumbers look at it, see no power and get us in.
you need:
- element removal tool
- decent length of steel bar or threaded rod. a long screwdriver sometimes works depending how tight it is.
- new element , there are tin,nickel and stainless types, depending on how "hard" your water is. if you have high calcium buildup , or your soap is hard to lather then consider your water "hard". also make sure you get the correct sized element, should be on the side of cylinder ie 2000w or 2kw
-small clip on style ammeter (current meter) of some sort
1)make sure its all turned off via the isolater switch
2)crack the element before you drain the tank. the sides are very thin and you'll rip the thread right out if you try to crack it when its empty.
3)drain water via taps bleed/drain valve and isolate water supply to tank . 95% of cylinders have a drain valve, a few won't. use your common sense to trace the plumbing and figure which is which. in a house theres usually a pipe outside dumping into a drain.
4)disconnect wires off element and unscrew, can be a bit tight as when they blow out they often swell outwards, use pliers to crush the element inwards to get it out
5) screw in new element, making sure to use new washers etc that come with it.
6) reconnect wiring, usually pretty obvious as you just disconnected them from the old element.
7) refill cylinder, turn power back on, and check current draw , a 2kw element will be approx 8-8.5amps, 3kw approx 12amps, this tells you its drawing the correct power and is heating. itll take a few hours to get hot though.
done. pretty easy really if you use common sense. only time its a pain is when there no drain valve, then you need to prepare to get wet. have heard of people siphoning it out,or doing a quick change on a full tank.
I have had to drain a small amount at a time via the element hole before using the element as a bung. draining via the taps only can leave up to 30L of residual water in the cylinder.
Thanks!
Yeah all fuses are fine, thermometer thingee is fine, but the element isn't doing what it's ment to when you run the multimeter across it apparently....
It does have a 1 way brass valve thing under the tank so i can drain it thank god! Also has an isolation tap which is handy
Good to know to crack the element
before the water is drained!
So i'll whip the element out and take it in and get a new one....
Just got to get the removal tool I guess.
It's just a really big socket right? Cause there's a place that hires tools out down the road and they got some HUGE sockets for trucks and large machinery so I'm sure I could grab one off them.
Sure you be using thread tape when putting it back in or will the o-rings take care of that?