Well, today I was snoozing along in my little bed only to be awakened by hubby's distress call, "Greg, the house is flooding!" I jump out of bed to find the water heater tank has failed and water is spraying somewhere inside the flue. I throw on my designer disaster outfit and go out to shut off the water and begin the emergency clean up routine. Get the tank drained, disconnected and out on the porch. I tilted it forward to finish draining the remaining inch or so of water from the bottom...it's red rusty water! No white mineral pieces though. Granted, it's right at exactly 10 years old and has had only softened water in it since I installed it in '06. My parents' last WH lasted over 20 and was still fine when they replaced it before a failure occurred....but they don't have a water softener.
Now my question is, anybody notice a higher failure rate due to corrosion when a water softener is involved? I mean, it does add sodium to the water. Just last month I had to replace both shut off valves under the kitchen sink because they both began leaking at the same time and were installed at the same time in '99. My pipes are CPVC so they are fine. I'm thinking the anode went away and then the tank began sacrificing itself. I've been reading up on powered anodes...anyone have experience with one of them? They are made of titanium. Link below. They are a little expensive but cheaper than $500 for a WH plus possible damage. I've never had any odors from anode reactions, but I've read that softeners can cause anodes to be consumed more rapidly due to the corrosive properties of the water. I should have tried to remove the anode for inspection while it was still full of water to help hold it in place because they can be screwed in there really tight, but alas I was just wanting to get it out of there. I went ahead and bought another Rheem built one from HD simply because it was the same size and would just slide right in there. It has a 6 year tank warranty. Wish it were made of stainless steel! Any thoughts, comments, recommendations to share?
Now my question is, anybody notice a higher failure rate due to corrosion when a water softener is involved? I mean, it does add sodium to the water. Just last month I had to replace both shut off valves under the kitchen sink because they both began leaking at the same time and were installed at the same time in '99. My pipes are CPVC so they are fine. I'm thinking the anode went away and then the tank began sacrificing itself. I've been reading up on powered anodes...anyone have experience with one of them? They are made of titanium. Link below. They are a little expensive but cheaper than $500 for a WH plus possible damage. I've never had any odors from anode reactions, but I've read that softeners can cause anodes to be consumed more rapidly due to the corrosive properties of the water. I should have tried to remove the anode for inspection while it was still full of water to help hold it in place because they can be screwed in there really tight, but alas I was just wanting to get it out of there. I went ahead and bought another Rheem built one from HD simply because it was the same size and would just slide right in there. It has a 6 year tank warranty. Wish it were made of stainless steel! Any thoughts, comments, recommendations to share?