If you were to immerse your hand into 160F water, that would be sufficient to burn you most seriously, generating 2nd degree burns in under a minute -- easily. Given enough immersion time, 3rd degree burns are inevitable. However, that's not how you framed the question. If the water in your water heater is 160 degrees, that doesn't mean that's what's coming out of the tap, and it would be impossible to fill most sinks with 160F water if the water in the heater was 160F. Here's why: First, there's a lot of water in the pipes between the heater and the sink. That water will range from less than 160F near the heater to room temperature at the sink. However, in winter, the water nearest the outside wall may well be far below room temp. Even if you run the cooler water down the drain, the hot water from the heater is passing through colder pipes, and dropping calories all the way. Naturally, the material the pipes are made from, and the amount of insulation plays a part too. Once it hits the sink, it'll shed a huge amount of heat as it averages the temperature of the sink and its own higher temp, in order to reach stasis. In my house, where I run the heater at 140F, I can't get water out of the tap at over about 110F, over about a 30' run. So the answer is (and I don't mean to be too literal -- this is a problem my wife and I discuss a lot -- I like hotter baths :} ), that while 160F water is WAY over what you can safely stand as a human, setting your water heater to 160F doesn't mean that's what your bath temp is going to be.
মোবাইল নাম্বার 01999103997
It is a water heater, not a hot water heater. There would be little point in using a hot water heater. I assume that is your point.
Of course a water heater thermostat would be defective as water heaters / hydronic boilers would use an Aqua Stat
Check that there isn't water around the water heater first, which would mean that turning it off and closing the water valve would be a good idea. Then, check the fuse box to see if the power has tripped--that is if it is an electric water heater.
Plugged heater core. Faulty temp blend door mechanism.
That would be called the water heater valve.It simply controls allowing water to flow thru the heater core.To explain when you adjust the heat to warm to hot it opens the flap inside that plastic part to allow the warm coolant to flow in based on the adjustment you made on the dial on the dash.This is a Mazda part only,I seriously doubt any auto parts stores would have this if you need it due to a leak in the plastic itself.
in water
depends on the wattage of the elements along with the temp of the cold water but i would guess an hour or two
Personally I would not, as the cold water could thermo-shock the heater. And if you have a glass-lined tank, it will crack it and shorten the life of the tank. I would follow the manufacturer's instructions.
My bet would be the hot water heater cycling water through
Why would anyone put dirt in a water heater ?? Normally water heaters have sediment from the minerials in the water supply and the instructions furnished with the heater tells how to cure this problem
Immersion heaters are rated in watts, there is no average size. So, the answer will depend heavily on the wattage of your particular heater. Also, once you know the size, it will heat thirty liters of water at the rate of so many degrees per hour, so you also have to specify the starting temperature. The same heater will take much longer to get to sixty from 0 degrees as it would from 23.