On Tue, 5 Mar 2013 21:19:37 -0500, "rdoc" <
be...@this.net> wrote:
>
>
>I can't see any way for air to get in the lines at the heater level (they
>split right above the unit) but that's where it has to come from or it would
>not affect both ends of the house. I wondered if the holding tank was water
>logging any faster than usual, but it is not (old fashioned but not old
>galvanized tank style). We get the sulfur gas like many wells out here that
>turns everything red and brown but one would not think this would occur from
>that on the exact day the new heater is installed. It certainly is annoying.
>
>What could be causing this?
fIs it possible the sulfur is reacting with something in the HWH and
making gas. Some material in the new HWH that wasn't in the old one?
As tp air entering, if there were a leak, it seems a lot more likely
water would be exiting. (Of course I have city water which is under
pressure. I don't know how well water systerms are set up.)
Especially when you're not usig the hot water, but if there is a
chance air is getting sucked in, maybe you can at the joints you
fiddled with for the installation, wrap a soaking wet towl around the
joint and maybe that will keep air from getting in, for the length of
a test. This is just a guess. I've had spitting but only after
water was drained from pipes.