A rare good word about Ward's
My parents replaced their water heater in 1973 with what I'm guessing was a TOL Ward's model. Nice wood grain trim with a snap-on cover for the controls that gave it a clean look. Probably designed for a location where it was in plain view, but it lived in their basement where it was rarely seen.
The house was built in 1927 and has original galvanized pipe that is constantly leaving little rusty bits in aerators at every faucet and in every toilet tank. No doubt the WH tank built up a thick layer of sediment.
They did not do one bit of maintenance to that heater and it lasted over 30 years until it developed a leak at the bottom of the tank.
If there's no problem with the WH itself, just replace the bad section of pipe and save yourself the larger expense until the WH fails.
My parents replaced their water heater in 1973 with what I'm guessing was a TOL Ward's model. Nice wood grain trim with a snap-on cover for the controls that gave it a clean look. Probably designed for a location where it was in plain view, but it lived in their basement where it was rarely seen.
The house was built in 1927 and has original galvanized pipe that is constantly leaving little rusty bits in aerators at every faucet and in every toilet tank. No doubt the WH tank built up a thick layer of sediment.
They did not do one bit of maintenance to that heater and it lasted over 30 years until it developed a leak at the bottom of the tank.
If there's no problem with the WH itself, just replace the bad section of pipe and save yourself the larger expense until the WH fails.