Either the thermostat has been set too low, your hot water heater is not big enough, or your hot water heater has not been installed properly.
It's because "hot-water" is a compound adjective, modifying "heater". It's not for heating water, it's for heating a house with hot water. There are many types of heaters that heat water, but only a hot-water heater is used for providing heated water for domestic use. A hydronic boiler also heats water, but it's only for use in radiators.The name "Hot Water Heater" is completely wrong for any use. There is no need to heat hot water. IT has always been "water heater". The term hot water heater has just been used for years because people don't realize the difference. It has always been WATER HEATER.The first answer is jibberish and makes no practical sense at all.
This could either be due to the age or the materials used to make the water heater or the fact that the water heater has not been installed with vacuum breakers causing the geyser to collapse from the inside-out due to incorrect atmospheric pressure within the water heater
either your hot water heater has been installed incorrectly or the thermostat has been set too low Sorry to butt in BUT there is NO THERMOSTAT on a hot water heater there is a AQUASTAT and sometimes the heater short cycles just to maintain the SET temperature
The heater core may be stopped up. This can be cleaned by removing the heater hoses under the hood of the van and running water through the heater from a water hose. Disconnect the hoses from the front of the engine.
no there has not been a pyramid found under water
AnswerLeak or the car has been under water. I would suspect the latter.Your heater core could be in that area. Or there could be a hole in your car frame and water may be following your computer wires. What year, make, model, and engine size is it.
Doesn't matter which way the water flows. The heater core is just a tube with fins and water can flow either direction.
form_title= Electric Water Heater form_header= Save with an electric water heater. Do you currently use an electric water heater?*= () Yes () No () Not Sure Do you have any problems with your current heater?*= () Yes () No () Not Sure How old is your home?*= _ [50]
There may have been some water left in the heater core when you disconnected both hoses at the firewall. I can't think of any other explanation since there is no water circulating through the heater core.
If you mean strike them and then relight than no. Once a match has been lit and the carbon burned out, it has already gone through a sequence of chemical reactions making it unable to strike again. But if you were to use an existing flame and light a match that has been used; then it would work. Hope I helped =P
usually it is a vacuumn problem right at the heater control switch or sometime under the hood